Blur my shell should be an official extension that a user can toggle on and off ootb. It makes Gnome 40 look much more modern and aesthetically pleasing. Love it.
ArcMenu, Dash to Panel, and Tiling Assistant are all incredibly useful for anyone switching over from windows (as that's what I'm doing right now) it makes the transition so much easier and more familiar
you mean you couldnt switch from windows to linux because of tiling features? cos yikes, linux has and has had the ability to mimic windows' tiling for years. Not that many do, since it's not a super good method comparatively speaking
@@forna4090 yeah, I knew it had to exists on Linux but I couldnt find it on Google or asking on Reddit. I found that the Linux implementation is superior to Windows as I have expected. Now, there this thing called snap groups in Windows 11 and I'm hoping there is something similar.
@@methamphetamememcmeth3422 I never really thought of using the word tiling. I have been searching for snap alternative for Gnome, gnome split screen and Gnome multitasking
Thanks a lot for this overview. "Dash to Panel" just saved me from getting insane. I've tried getting used to the gnome40 paradigm, but it drove me completely nuts. All I would need is a simple checkbox to make the builtin dock visible at all time at the bottom of the screen. This would avoid having to install an extensions. Plain vanilla Gnome40 is just a bit too plain for me...
I agree. Gnome 40 just feels like using an iPad on a desktop... Extensions make it a LOT better though, but a lot of the things extensions can add should just simply be the default.
Dash to Panel and Arc Menu to me are so much basic I can't use Gnome without them, then Hot Corners and Sound Input, finally most of the others you mentioned, I think most of us feel the same about Gnome Extensions
I'm using Ubuntu for two weeks now. It's so much better than windows 11. Thank you so much for this video. Arc Menu, Vitalis and Dash to panel make Ubuntu perfect 😍
My 3 basics are Dash to Panel, ArcMenu and CPU Manager. One problem though with any gnome extension is when Gnome is upgraded it can take a while before some become compatible.
In my opinion we should try using gnome for what it is, instead of making it mimic kde or cinnamon etc. Customising gnome too much makes gnome lose its identity and at that point we are better off using cinnamon. Gnome sets a certain workflow and if we want something more traditional then we shouldn't go through the hassle of making gnome to something that it isn't. Everyone should try using gnome with very little customisation and the default theming. It has cured my DE/WM hopping (for now, atleast). Great showcase of the extensions though :)
Most people don't want to learn new ways and develop new workflow. They are strongly attached to their acquired habits, even if those are inefficient. Case in point: Window's Start Menu. It is not a good design (inefficient* use of screen real-estate) but many people are attached to it and even seek to replicate it on Linux desktop (silly, IMO). * Why the hell would you limit your apps listing to a small window in a corner of the screen? Your task in that very precise moment is to find and launch an app. Therefore, why not have most of the screen display the info relevant to that task? Start Menu: a small window, with sliding menus and scrolling list -- totally inefficient. But many users are so accustomed to and familiar with this that they don't even question this design.
Can you explain why this is needed? When you are looking for an app, why be confined to a smaller menu instead of a full (or quasi full) screen listing of your apps?
@@Dee-Ell i think most people are used to a small box to search for stuff that doesn’t take you away from what you have open. Especially if they are used to windows
@@Meat-Puppet That's what I don't understand: "take away" from what? Your task in that precise moment is to find and launch an app. Therefore, what you have open is irrelevant. So, wouldn't you want more apps listed and more visible on screen than being limited to a small window in a corner of the screen? Even if you type a search string, wouldn't you want more matches to appear front and center and easily visible? But I think you kinda nailed it with your last sentence: because some people are just used to Windows. They are so accustomed to that design and workflow that they confound acquired habit with truly good design and efficient workflow.
@@Dee-Ell Just imagine you're watching a video and you need to open an editor to take notes without missing anything... Also it's less mouse movement and the amount of icons displayed at once is not that different. They're just different trade-offs.
@@marcusaureliusf You open your notes editor by typing in a search box or with some keyboard shortcuts or by using some launcher widget. Done. If you know exactly what you want to launch, you usually don't use the apps listing. The apps listing is for browsing for apps when you don't really remember or know what you have installed. So, again, apps listing confined to a quarter of the screen is sub-optimal for browsing and is poor design, IMO.
There's two in here that would actually be essential for me (Vitals, Screenshot tool). Thanks! Blur My Shell looks like a nice-to-have also. Instead of Impatience, I prefer to turn off animations entirely with GNOME Tweaks. Also prefer Pop OS's tiling window feature.
The big question here is: Do all of these extensions make gnome slow or unstable? I have had problems before with extensions, you update your system and some of the extensions start to act funny or stop working altogether. I think gnome has that problem, the desktop itself is so plain that you need a lot of extensions to make it usable, but those extensions are developed independently so ultimately the DE becomes a mess.
For this very reason I do my best to avoid the ones which interact with GNOME layout much. My list in my PopOS! which I've had no performance issue so far: *OpenWeather, CPU Power Manager, GSConnect, Resource Monitor, Screenshot Tool, Auto Move Windows, Clipboard Indicator, Sound Input & Output Device Chooser, Multi Monitors Add-On.* As you see most of these do not mess with GNOME itself and are mostly hardware related stuff.
screenshot tool autosave feature is gonna be so useful for me when i move to linux i usually just use snipping tool on windows on school videos and then go in temp then move them into folders
Another winner from TechHut, imho. This one packs a whole bunch of information into a relatively short video. I installed all of the extensions as recommended, although one of them is messing with my display, so I will have to handle that, but it's no big deal. I do like the idea of Gnome extensions, and it's a great way of customizing your DE to make it look and behave just how you want it to.
For *performance and compatibility* reasons I do my best to avoid the ones which interact with GNOME layout. My list in my PopOS! which I've had no OS issue so far: *OpenWeather, CPU Power Manager, GSConnect, Resource Monitor, Screenshot Tool, Auto Move Windows, Clipboard Indicator, Sound Input & Output Device Chooser, Multi Monitors Add-On.* As you see most of these do not mess with GNOME itself and are mostly hardware related stuff.
I have following quiet interesting Extensions: Appindicator and KstatusNotifier Support Arcmenu Auto Move Windows Blur my shell Burn my windows Caffeine Coverflow Alt-Tab Desktop Cube Desktop Icons NG Extension List Hide Activity Button Just Perfection Privacy Quick setting Rounded Windows Corner Top Panel Workspace Scroll TopHat Transparent Top Bar User Avatar in Quick Settings User Themes Wallpaper Switcher
Many useful items. Question: In the end it looks and feels like a combo of KDE and Windows. So maybe it would be better to use KDE? The GNOME workflow is different, but I've found that it makes me more productive. But... That's the beauty of Linux - there are as many Linux setups as there are installations. Linux is AWESOME! 🙂
Another interesting and informative video. Looking at this which is actually great looking i see a resemblance. This looks 80% with the Windows 11 desktop i work with every day at work. Rounded corners, menu you showed is exactly the same, weather taskbar all the same. It seems Microsoft did nail it this time at least with how the system looks. Interesting video thanks.
It looks like you got used to a Windows-like workflow. Most efficient for me. I don't like docks or dual panels as I think they are just waste of space; when you can just have them all in one panel.
@@malkogindrat Actually various Windows-like set-up distros can be set-up very different with different "start" menu layouts and different taskbars. People mostly criticize Windows for being sluggish and some dumb ideas like those dumb tiles in start menu. All the Windows-like layouts in Linux work better than in the original. Linux devs just took what's good from Windows and fixed it to make it better. Also many distros use Windows-like layout, because they want it to be accesible for new users which is a good approach. People who want something different can always easily modify the interface to make it Gnome 2 dual panel style, MacOS style or something else.
It all depends on setup. You can have global menu in the top panel and tons of applets, tray icons and bottom panel/dock for windows switching. Everything can be set to autohide if you want. My MacOS style layout in Linux Mint takes less space than Win10/11 panel with plank dock autohiding and avoiding windows.
It's only "most efficient" only because you are familiar with it and accustomed to it, due to time spent with it. The "Start Menu" is not even an efficient design -- a relatively small window in a corner of the screen listing apps, that you may have to scroll through and drill down to (more) sliding menus to find your app.
Excellent! How the hell do you get the Extension On/Off/Settings menu in your top bar, on the right of your "Vitals" extension? (you are switchon on/off your extension and going into extensions settings from your top bar)
Hi.. I'm trying to find OpenWeather on Ubuntu 23.10 extension manager and I don't find. Is it still available for you in the list of extensions or is it just me having this issue?
This is going to be a silly question but where do you find there? I have searched under widgets, or appearance, online with no luck? Noobie here to linux so thanks for understanding.
@@paulb9769 Before Gnome 40 I just used the hot corner and then clicked on the bar, but in 40+ the extra distance from the corner to the bar is pretty annoying. I don't feel like I need an extension though because most of the time I launch programs with the $Super + Number shortcut or by hitting the shortcut to open the overview then typing the first couple letters of the program.
@@xthebumpx The dock/favorites bar is huge and it has no customization either. I have been using Plasma for the past few years now and the change to G40 has been a bit hard to get used to.
Sound Input & Output Devices Chooser expensioin got stuck for Gnome 42. And the developer hasn't updated it for so long. Seems like it will remain dead :(
Arc menu is for windows users. I feel as though gnome's search feature is more than sufficient. It's easy enough that my 5 and 9 year old kids have been using it for a year now. Don't get in the habit of hanging on to something from 1995.
This is aproximatelly what is beeing used on nobara OS and also what i need to be satisfied with my gnome experience, I partially like gnome a lot but I do not want to open the big menu all the time. I am also looking for some good gnome RUN & arcmenu run extensions
How about system-monitor instead of vitals, and gtile instead of tiling assistant (works like divvy on mac or displayfusion on win -- manual arrangement, not auto).
I had an issue using dash to panel where the Lock Screen (gdm ) lost the top panel menu. I am now using dash to dock with auto hide and don’t have that issue anymore.
The easy way is to install an extension in Firefox first (may be it is called gnome extension). So when you will be on The gnome extension web page you will see a selector that enable a direct installation. Sorry for my bad english
someone know why the extensions app doesn t work well, the buttons have some weird shadows and sometimes the options dissapears, im using manjaro, thks!
For further customization I would also use Menu Libre and Themix/Oomox. One to change the launchers on panel to a monochrome icon scheme and the other to make custom GTK themes and icon sets to really tie everything together with a wallpaper.
My fedora 40 for some reason is reading wrong wifi hardware on my laptop which is why I am only getting 1mbpd bitrate and internet is not working properly. Can anyone tell how to fix that?
Blur my shell should be an official extension that a user can toggle on and off ootb. It makes Gnome 40 look much more modern and aesthetically pleasing. Love it.
I agree
wish it worked on other displays, it only works on the main one for me
@@Technically_Techy sucks to be u bruh
@@jasonfanclub4267we’re 😢❤ da
I had the blur effect, so I installed "Control blur on Lockscreen" so that I could set the sigma to 0. 🙂
ArcMenu, Dash to Panel, and Tiling Assistant are all incredibly useful for anyone switching over from windows (as that's what I'm doing right now) it makes the transition so much easier and more familiar
there is also another awesome extension called "Just Perfection"
You can even speed up animation speeds with it :D
@@RandomRUclipsUser-5 that feature fixed a criticism I had with Gnome, animations slower than my mouse.
Wow!!! Excellent, thanks a lot!
This one truly is perfect, I managed to get rid of 4 other extensions just using this one
Bluetooth quick connect (before restart)
Brightness control using ddcutil (control external monitor brightness)
Clipboard Indicator (Clipboard history tool)
Sound Input & Output Device Chooser (Control in/output audio devices directly from taskbar)
That tiling assistant is something that I have been looking for years. It was quite literally why I couldn't switch from Windows. Thank you.
you mean you couldnt switch from windows to linux because of tiling features? cos yikes, linux has and has had the ability to mimic windows' tiling for years. Not that many do, since it's not a super good method comparatively speaking
@@forna4090 yeah, I knew it had to exists on Linux but I couldnt find it on Google or asking on Reddit. I found that the Linux implementation is superior to Windows as I have expected. Now, there this thing called snap groups in Windows 11 and I'm hoping there is something similar.
@@marufbepary100 That's just not true. A simple 'tiling on linux' search will give you thousands of results for both RUclips and Reddit.
@@methamphetamememcmeth3422 I never really thought of using the word tiling. I have been searching for snap alternative for Gnome, gnome split screen and Gnome multitasking
I'm using Mate desktop, but I've tested Gnome 4 and with few extensions it's really awesome. People who are hating on Gnome 4 are weird.
I LOVE stock gnome 40! The trackpad gestures is just amazing for my workflow.
And with stock gnome you don't worry that any extension breaks !
Yep. I love my Pop OS stock because I like being able to do something.
Thanks a lot for this overview. "Dash to Panel" just saved me from getting insane. I've tried getting used to the gnome40 paradigm, but it drove me completely nuts. All I would need is a simple checkbox to make the builtin dock visible at all time at the bottom of the screen. This would avoid having to install an extensions. Plain vanilla Gnome40 is just a bit too plain for me...
I agree. Gnome 40 just feels like using an iPad on a desktop... Extensions make it a LOT better though, but a lot of the things extensions can add should just simply be the default.
Dash to Panel and Arc Menu to me are so much basic I can't use Gnome without them, then Hot Corners and Sound Input, finally most of the others you mentioned, I think most of us feel the same about Gnome Extensions
As if you were reading my mind... Just installed Fedora 35 today for the first time after being on Linux Mint... Thanks so much for this...
I'm using Ubuntu for two weeks now. It's so much better than windows 11. Thank you so much for this video. Arc Menu, Vitalis and Dash to panel make Ubuntu perfect 😍
My 3 basics are Dash to Panel, ArcMenu and CPU Manager. One problem though with any gnome extension is when Gnome is upgraded it can take a while before some become compatible.
I'm so glad I found your channel. I'm learning so much about Linux and Endeavour. Thanks.
In my opinion we should try using gnome for what it is, instead of making it mimic kde or cinnamon etc. Customising gnome too much makes gnome lose its identity and at that point we are better off using cinnamon. Gnome sets a certain workflow and if we want something more traditional then we shouldn't go through the hassle of making gnome to something that it isn't. Everyone should try using gnome with very little customisation and the default theming. It has cured my DE/WM hopping (for now, atleast).
Great showcase of the extensions though :)
Finally, some common sense. Thank you.
Exactly this.
Need Wayland and KDE animations and apps are too janky (not user friendly) so this is a good options
Cinnamon doesn't have so many extensions unlike gnome. I use vanilla tho
Most people don't want to learn new ways and develop new workflow. They are strongly attached to their acquired habits, even if those are inefficient. Case in point: Window's Start Menu. It is not a good design (inefficient* use of screen real-estate) but many people are attached to it and even seek to replicate it on Linux desktop (silly, IMO). * Why the hell would you limit your apps listing to a small window in a corner of the screen? Your task in that very precise moment is to find and launch an app. Therefore, why not have most of the screen display the info relevant to that task? Start Menu: a small window, with sliding menus and scrolling list -- totally inefficient. But many users are so accustomed to and familiar with this that they don't even question this design.
it's been a while since i used ubuntu...dash to panel is a lifesaver! thanks for the video
ArcMenu honestly seems like the best application menu on Linux. Assuming you're in the full desktop environment world.
Can you explain why this is needed? When you are looking for an app, why be confined to a smaller menu instead of a full (or quasi full) screen listing of your apps?
@@Dee-Ell i think most people are used to a small box to search for stuff that doesn’t take you away from what you have open. Especially if they are used to windows
@@Meat-Puppet That's what I don't understand: "take away" from what? Your task in that precise moment is to find and launch an app. Therefore, what you have open is irrelevant. So, wouldn't you want more apps listed and more visible on screen than being limited to a small window in a corner of the screen? Even if you type a search string, wouldn't you want more matches to appear front and center and easily visible? But I think you kinda nailed it with your last sentence: because some people are just used to Windows. They are so accustomed to that design and workflow that they confound acquired habit with truly good design and efficient workflow.
@@Dee-Ell Just imagine you're watching a video and you need to open an editor to take notes without missing anything... Also it's less mouse movement and the amount of icons displayed at once is not that different. They're just different trade-offs.
@@marcusaureliusf You open your notes editor by typing in a search box or with some keyboard shortcuts or by using some launcher widget. Done. If you know exactly what you want to launch, you usually don't use the apps listing. The apps listing is for browsing for apps when you don't really remember or know what you have installed. So, again, apps listing confined to a quarter of the screen is sub-optimal for browsing and is poor design, IMO.
There's two in here that would actually be essential for me (Vitals, Screenshot tool). Thanks! Blur My Shell looks like a nice-to-have also.
Instead of Impatience, I prefer to turn off animations entirely with GNOME Tweaks. Also prefer Pop OS's tiling window feature.
the PopOS team made that available as an extension as well, Pop Shell, i think. i'm using it in fedora and you're right! it's AWESOME!
The big question here is: Do all of these extensions make gnome slow or unstable? I have had problems before with extensions, you update your system and some of the extensions start to act funny or stop working altogether. I think gnome has that problem, the desktop itself is so plain that you need a lot of extensions to make it usable, but those extensions are developed independently so ultimately the DE becomes a mess.
For this very reason I do my best to avoid the ones which interact with GNOME layout much.
My list in my PopOS! which I've had no performance issue so far:
*OpenWeather, CPU Power Manager, GSConnect, Resource Monitor, Screenshot Tool, Auto Move Windows, Clipboard Indicator, Sound Input & Output Device Chooser, Multi Monitors Add-On.*
As you see most of these do not mess with GNOME itself and are mostly hardware related stuff.
Gnome is meant to be a "get out of my way" desktop. I love it since I honestly rarely insteract with the desktop. All my programs are fullscreen .
If you wanna fix the sharp corners on your overview, put dash to panel on the bottom or sides
Yay! I was just watching your stream from yesterday and got this notification :D
screenshot tool autosave feature is gonna be so useful for me when i move to linux
i usually just use snipping tool on windows on school videos and then go in temp then move them into folders
Another winner from TechHut, imho. This one packs a whole bunch of information into a relatively short video. I installed all of the extensions as recommended, although one of them is messing with my display, so I will have to handle that, but it's no big deal. I do like the idea of Gnome extensions, and it's a great way of customizing your DE to make it look and behave just how you want it to.
You might wanna blur out your information in the weather extension. It showed your location.
I don't really care to ride my city. I talk about my college a lot.
@@TechHut lots of crazy weirdos online. Be careful. and, by the way, I think you have a very nice channel.
For *performance and compatibility* reasons I do my best to avoid the ones which interact with GNOME layout.
My list in my PopOS! which I've had no OS issue so far:
*OpenWeather, CPU Power Manager, GSConnect, Resource Monitor, Screenshot Tool, Auto Move Windows, Clipboard Indicator, Sound Input & Output Device Chooser, Multi Monitors Add-On.*
As you see most of these do not mess with GNOME itself and are mostly hardware related stuff.
I have to recommend Night theme switcher
were you going for the cartoon villian vibe with the lizard on your hand?
I have following quiet interesting Extensions:
Appindicator and KstatusNotifier Support
Arcmenu
Auto Move Windows
Blur my shell
Burn my windows
Caffeine
Coverflow Alt-Tab
Desktop Cube
Desktop Icons NG
Extension List
Hide Activity Button
Just Perfection
Privacy Quick setting
Rounded Windows Corner
Top Panel Workspace Scroll
TopHat
Transparent Top Bar
User Avatar in Quick Settings
User Themes
Wallpaper Switcher
Many useful items.
Question: In the end it looks and feels like a combo of KDE and Windows. So maybe it would be better to use KDE?
The GNOME workflow is different, but I've found that it makes me more productive.
But... That's the beauty of Linux - there are as many Linux setups as there are installations.
Linux is AWESOME! 🙂
Another interesting and informative video. Looking at this which is actually great looking i see a resemblance. This looks 80% with the Windows 11 desktop i work with every day at work. Rounded corners, menu you showed is exactly the same, weather taskbar all the same. It seems Microsoft did nail it this time at least with how the system looks. Interesting video thanks.
Is the lizard is a subtle nod that you should be running OpenSuse?
Pop shell got updated and it is working nicely in gnome 41
cool little dude there just enjoying his time on camera lol
Tnx a lot man. I wish you all the best 👍
Nice! I'll try out GNOME and these extensions. Been using KDE Plasma 5 on Steam Deck. Which distro are you using?
Ty tiling assistant thats what i was looking for!
Thank you! I finally found the best tiling manager for fedora!)
Thank you for this Video !
How would you rate Gnome 40 in comparison to Cosmic?
Good Video. Helped me a lot.
The fact that you need an extension to make the touch pad clicks work is messed up
The fact that someone took the time to write an extension to make the touch pad clicks work, is awesome!
You don't need an extension for that. In settings > mouse and touch pad you can simply enable it. That its not enabled as default is another thing.
@@eival Ah well, in that case, it's both awesome!
@@GuidoMakor Absolutely!
It looks like you got used to a Windows-like workflow.
Most efficient for me. I don't like docks or dual panels as I think they are just waste of space; when you can just have them all in one panel.
@@malkogindrat Actually various Windows-like set-up distros can be set-up very different with different "start" menu layouts and different taskbars. People mostly criticize Windows for being sluggish and some dumb ideas like those dumb tiles in start menu. All the Windows-like layouts in Linux work better than in the original. Linux devs just took what's good from Windows and fixed it to make it better. Also many distros use Windows-like layout, because they want it to be accesible for new users which is a good approach. People who want something different can always easily modify the interface to make it Gnome 2 dual panel style, MacOS style or something else.
It all depends on setup. You can have global menu in the top panel and tons of applets, tray icons and bottom panel/dock for windows switching. Everything can be set to autohide if you want. My MacOS style layout in Linux Mint takes less space than Win10/11 panel with plank dock autohiding and avoiding windows.
It's only "most efficient" only because you are familiar with it and accustomed to it, due to time spent with it. The "Start Menu" is not even an efficient design -- a relatively small window in a corner of the screen listing apps, that you may have to scroll through and drill down to (more) sliding menus to find your app.
Excellent! How the hell do you get the Extension On/Off/Settings menu in your top bar, on the right of your "Vitals" extension? (you are switchon on/off your extension and going into extensions settings from your top bar)
I prefer the stock gnome 40, but interesting to see different options there are
Hi.. I'm trying to find OpenWeather on Ubuntu 23.10 extension manager and I don't find. Is it still available for you in the list of extensions or is it just me having this issue?
great video! thank very much!
This is going to be a silly question but where do you find there? I have searched under widgets, or appearance, online with no luck? Noobie here to linux so thanks for understanding.
This helped a lot!
11:48 how do you add this gnome pannel? do I need an extension for that too?
How did you get the Archmenu UP instead down? @TechHut
It's really nice ArcMenu, but it crashes on gnome 40 and 40.1
How did you change the applications icon into the fedora icon?
My top bar always places the extensions on the right hand side of the top bar, how can I add some of them to the left?
Why on earth is a setting like dash to panel not included? I think it is major omission. What were they thinking?
Vanilla Gnome for me. Haven't found an extension I felt improved my workflow yet.
I used Gnome about 10 years ago I hate the way the favorites bar is not adjustable. I like to use my mouse what do you do?
@@paulb9769 Before Gnome 40 I just used the hot corner and then clicked on the bar, but in 40+ the extra distance from the corner to the bar is pretty annoying. I don't feel like I need an extension though because most of the time I launch programs with the $Super + Number shortcut or by hitting the shortcut to open the overview then typing the first couple letters of the program.
@@xthebumpx The dock/favorites bar is huge and it has no customization either. I have been using Plasma for the past few years now and the change to G40 has been a bit hard to get used to.
*Subscribed*
Thanks for these videos!
Sir can you please suggest an app, how to setup Mouse 4 & 5 buttons for copy pasting ?
caffeine is one of the most useful extension i've ever installed
Is there an extension or some other way to load the KDE Plasma desktop on logout and login?
I'm using Zorin 16.1 pro OS. I'm using barely a month and I have no linux experiences before. How can i get those extensions? I love to have it
Do you know if it's possible to swap out the file manager on GNome41/Fedora 35? Silverlight version I almost forgot to mention.
tiling assistant is awesome
im unable to get arcmenu working in the current version of pop os. Is there any way to fix this?
Can you tell me which distro is used in this video ?
%This looking so nice.
Judging from the ArcMenu icon, it's probably Fedora
Looks amazing. Can i uninstall ubuntu and just install gnome 40?
Awesome vid
Is it possible to use Gnome 3 addons (extensions, themes, tweaks) in Gnome 4? Thanks.
Will these extensions work on Debian gnome 38 ?
arc menu what is using by manjaro default. I love dash to panel also.
I recently passed on ubuntu, are those extensions available un ubuntu?
thank you.
Sound Input & Output Devices Chooser expensioin got stuck for Gnome 42. And the developer hasn't updated it for so long. Seems like it will remain dead :(
how to install them?
wow used GNOME for years and most of these are new to me
Arc menu is for windows users. I feel as though gnome's search feature is more than sufficient. It's easy enough that my 5 and 9 year old kids have been using it for a year now. Don't get in the habit of hanging on to something from 1995.
This is aproximatelly what is beeing used on nobara OS and also what i need to be satisfied with my gnome experience, I partially like gnome a lot but I do not want to open the big menu all the time. I am also looking for some good gnome RUN & arcmenu run extensions
You should try KDE
Tiling Assistant doesn't work for me in Fedora 37 and Ubuntu 20.10.
Vitals is cool, but it doesn't show GPU temps, for that's why I'll stick to my old time favorite, Freon.
How about system-monitor instead of vitals, and gtile instead of tiling assistant (works like divvy on mac or displayfusion on win -- manual arrangement, not auto).
Gnome 40 is pretty good
I had an issue using dash to panel where the Lock Screen (gdm ) lost the top panel menu. I am now using dash to dock with auto hide and don’t have that issue anymore.
There are RPM packages for them?
I can not find input & output device chooser in gnome extensions (page)....
narf... not comaptible with Gnome 41
Can you run Compiz animations?
Let's go!
Very sorry Brandon, I was not able to attend any of your streams since, it becomes 11 PM here while you stream. I'd really love to speak with you! 💚😊
Is there an extension which works like EarTrumpet on Windows?
How to display vitals on dash to panel?
can you teach us how to install those extensions
blur my shell is not available in my ubuntu store....
I am new to gnome, I have just installed ubuntu 21.04, I have the site for extentions, but I dont know how to install them???
The easy way is to install an extension in Firefox first (may be it is called gnome extension). So when you will be on The gnome extension web page you will see a selector that enable a direct installation. Sorry for my bad english
I really like this video, and I do use a few gnome extensions, but I feel at this point kde would be the better option
I'm almost ready to switch from KDE Plasma (almost). Is your little companion going to give us a review of Gecko or Open SUSE ?🦎
someone know why the extensions app doesn t work well, the buttons have some weird shadows and sometimes the options dissapears, im using manjaro, thks!
noob question, can I install these on Pop_OS! 21.04?
yes
For further customization I would also use Menu Libre and Themix/Oomox. One to change the launchers on panel to a monochrome icon scheme and the other to make custom GTK themes and icon sets to really tie everything together with a wallpaper.
may i know who's the little guy with you?
What is your little lizard friend's name? He's very cute.
tks a lot
Clipboard Indicator !
My fedora 40 for some reason is reading wrong wifi hardware on my laptop which is why I am only getting 1mbpd bitrate and internet is not working properly. Can anyone tell how to fix that?