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Comment by Flamingoat

4 months ago

Arch has an installer these days. It works pretty well and you can have a system up and running in about 20 minutes if you have a fast internet connection.

For people that want a Windows like UI, I would probably suggest Cinnamon. It works pretty much like Windows 7/10 without all the visual nonsense that KDE typically has.

My experience is that KDE 6 has very little visual nonsense right out of the box. 4 and 5 did have a lot more, but most/all of it could be disabled. Most other Linux DEs don't really let you customize them to your own personal level of nonsense at any rate.

  • I probably see a lot more than other people since I spent a good few years doing pixel perfect web dev.

    I am not being hyperbolic when I say that I can see a pixel out of place on a webpage on the other side of the room.

    https://kde.org/content/home/main.jpg

    This is a screenshot from their site. Just in this screenshot I see the following:

    1) there is an horrendous text shadow effect on the text under the "Home" desktop icon in the top left.

    2) Clock text is too large compared to the rest of the interface, especially the icons next to it.

    3) Trash Icon looks like out of place compared to the other icons.

    4) Drop shadow effect on the window and the start menu thing. It kinda too dark really.

    5) Every single gap between interface elements seems different and off. The icon sizes seem a bit all over the place.

    6) There is a gradient on the window title bar and rounded corners. Cinnamon does this as well. I dunno it is very Window XP Luna (which I never liked).

    7) The window control icons look off to me and don't fit in with the rest of the interface IMO.

    A lot of this I appreciate can be probably be changed. But that is how it comes OOTB if it is an official screenshot. It feels like a Windows Vista ripoff.

    Generally I find KDE lacks "taste". None of the Linux GUIs are that great tbh. People put up fancy screenshots, but I guarantee the moment the windows are arranged in any other way it looks not so great.

    • I agree with your assessment of KDE lacking "taste". Imo, it looks like a system designed by engineers, not designers.

      GNOME has the opposite problem imo. I feel like it has "taste", but it feels like a system fully designed by designers, with no engineers giving practical pushback. It's the same issue macOS has, but amplified: Designers have some grand idea about their vision being the one true way of using the system and made it hard to impossible to customize.

      I currently use KDE, but am not happy with it for the reasons you described. I used to use GNOME, but wasn't happy with it for the reasons above.

      I have high hopes for Cosmic [0]. It seems like that one might get the balance right.

      [0] https://system76.com/cosmic

      4 replies →

    • With that level of nit picking everything is off and there is no OS / DE with zero inconsistencies.

      KDE is good for me. I admit that I simplify the interface in a new setup turning off some things but the fact that it gives me that capability is a huge plus for me.

      KDE Connect rocks by the way...

      1 reply →

  • The clutter is real though, take a look at this screenshot: https://imgur.com/a/nkedVYq

    Stock Konsole on the left, stock Ghostty on the right. Note that both terminals have multiple tabs open. The amount of wasted space and visual noise in Konsole is baffling. Not to mention Ghostty is able to display 4 more lines of actual console output (you know, the whole point of a console).

    In my experience, many KDE apps follow the same UX. Great for configuration and being able to use primarily the mouse, bad if you are more interested in a keyboard centric flow with a focus on the content.

Cinnamon? Really? In a KDE Connect thread?

KDE actually was built around the Windows paradigm; Gnome is a Mac clone. Cinnamon is a fork of Gnome maintained as a side project from a distro with a bad security and management track record. Really the only thing it adds is a launcher; KDE optionally provides the same style if the user wants it.

Go find a thread where your pet software is on topic. This thread is about KDE Connect. Does Cinnamon support that? Does Cinnamon offer anything like it?

  • > Cinnamon? Really? In a KDE Connect thread? > Go find a thread where your pet software is on topic. > This thread is about KDE Connect. Does Cinnamon support that?

    In this particular part of thread, people were talking about Windows UI replacements. Like it or not conversations do diverge from the original intended purpose.

    Secondly, Cinnamon isn't my "pet software". Cinnamon IMO is more similar to the Windows 7/10/11 UI than KDE and has none of the fluff that KDE normally has in it. I actually don't really like any of the Linux UIs. I think they all suffer from significant issues.

    > KDE actually was built around the Windows paradigm; Gnome is a Mac clone. Cinnamon is a fork of Gnome maintained as a side project from a distro with a bad security and management track record. Really the only thing it adds is a launcher; KDE optionally provides the same style if the user wants it.

    It seems that you really don't like cinnamon and thus why you are being so aggressive. I don't really appreciate the unwarranted hostility.

    I don't personally use Linux Mint (I use Debian). I don't like derivative distros for the reason that you highlighted. However Cinnamon seems works reasonably well and tends to be quite a bit lighter than KDE IME.

    > This thread is about KDE Connect. Does Cinnamon support that? Does Cinnamon offer anything like it?

    You are aware that you can use KDE software in other Desktop Environments? It took me a few seconds to do a web search and it seems that you can use KDE connect and Cinnamon at the same time.

  • > Does Cinnamon support that? Does Cinnamon offer anything like it?

    KDE Connect can be used with Cinnamon via GSConnect.