unpopular opinion probably, but I like the configurable zones approach. it’s probably because I’m used to fancyzones on my work pc and have gotten used to it.
every time I try to become a cool kid and use i3 or some other tiling wm variant, I get frustrated and go right back to plasma
I’m not a big fan of i3 either, pop shell and gnome are the best combination i’ve tried because i get the niceties of i3-style tiling but with good mouse-based defaults and I don’t have to waste time configuring things that everyone needs on a daily basis
My main issue with the zones is for some inexplicable reason one cannot save their template. You’re stuck with the default ones, and – at least in my case on Fedora – the custom one you set up tends to reset on reboot (not always, which is also ?? unless somehow it gets affected by OS updates?).
unpopular opinion probably, but I like the configurable zones approach. it’s probably because I’m used to fancyzones on my work pc and have gotten used to it.
every time I try to become a cool kid and use i3 or some other tiling wm variant, I get frustrated and go right back to plasma
I’m not a big fan of i3 either, pop shell and gnome are the best combination i’ve tried because i get the niceties of i3-style tiling but with good mouse-based defaults and I don’t have to waste time configuring things that everyone needs on a daily basis
My main issue with the zones is for some inexplicable reason one cannot save their template. You’re stuck with the default ones, and – at least in my case on Fedora – the custom one you set up tends to reset on reboot (not always, which is also ?? unless somehow it gets affected by OS updates?).