@kde@floss.social @kde@lemmy.kde.social
On one hand, *lame!!* Die in a fire, copycats
on the other hand, *cool!* it’s not my imagination that kdeconnect is the best phone app ever. thank you to all involved!! ❤️
Linux nerd, game nerd, dad jokes, memes, opinions. (OMG, so many opinions.)
#YearOfTheLinuxDesktop since 1998
@kde@floss.social @kde@lemmy.kde.social
On one hand, *lame!!* Die in a fire, copycats
on the other hand, *cool!* it’s not my imagination that kdeconnect is the best phone app ever. thank you to all involved!! ❤️
@Mousey@lemmy.zimage.com go fediversification of all the collectives!
@Mousey@lemmy.zimage.com bruh, did I just solve the equasion?
@PureTryOut The irony here is, the first time i ever saw window shading was *on* a Mac. It was an addon app that eventually wasn’t available anymore either. When i found it again in Linux (in the late 1900’s), i was thrilled.
Additionally,
Window Shading is a great way to make sticky windows unobtrusive, while still keeping them top of mind…
Especially true for things like mixers (like pavucontrol) and chat programs.
when i need to reference something in a browser behind my ide, doubleclick on the title-bar is ALWAYS set on ALL my desktops to window shade…
It’s invaluable for everyday GUI tasks.
Sure, this might not be everyone’s experience, but for those that know and use it, it’s a huge miss.
I use it reflexively, all the time.
Window Shading is a great way to:
- get my windows out of my way when I need to context switch (without switching desktops),
- reply to someone in another window on the same desktop (especially little windows like KDEConnect’s SMS, or or Element)
- show or access something on my desktop (icons? widgets?)
- quickly hide the contents of an app from shoulder surfers
It’s far more convenient and flexible than minimizing, or switching desktops.
@kde@floss.social @kde@lemmy.kde.social
Now if only window shading worked, I could ditch #X11 for good.
@grickle@mstdn.social did he just walk into a bar?