On 25/02/18 06:33 AM, Simon Lees wrote:
Well for me its the only desktop that does workspaces / virtual desktops properly with multiple screens out of the box, I can have screen 1 on workspace 4 and screen to on workspace 2 then change screen 1 to workspace 3 then sometime later change screen 2 to workspace 2, this is great for having certain apps on one screen and flicking between multiple on the other.
That is pretty much the way I worked with KDE and have this pact decade. Back in my Mandrive days (yes, before Mageia) I worked that way with Gnome, but I found Gnome increasingly ... something I didn't like working with. I look at Enlightenment and its architecture and I think "That's the right way to do things", but somehow whenever I load it and try to use it seem to suffer a heartbreak full of frustration trying to set it up, get it to do what you describe. There just doesn't seem to be the How-To that there is for KDE and, *sigh* Gnome. What there is seems to be written, well I can't say "in a different language", since it is English, yes, but it seems to have, and lets face it so does Linux compared to Windows, different cultural assumptions KDE does have a heavy footprint. I gather Enlightenment's is much smaller. Perhaps I need some better 'hand holding' than the current docco gives for beginners with Enlightenment. But it's had to pin down and describe what I think is lacking. -- One trend that bothers me is the glorification of stupidity, that the media is reassuring people it's all right not to know anything. That to me is far more dangerous than a little pornography on the Internet. - Carl Sagan -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org