![]() ![]() This is cool! It's not quite the thumbnail previews of virtual desktops I had in 2004 with Openbox, but It works well. It'll pick based on the first open app (I think?) or you can override the icon by right-clicking, or have it display a group of app icons for the open apps in that workspace. I was going to complain about the globe icons for the workspaces, but it turns out it only preselected those icons because I have browsers primarily in each workspace. If I switch to floating, or a new workspace, I appear to have no wallpaper behind the windows or the "new workspace" launcher. Luckily this is easily configurable in the extension settings, and updates as you change it so there's no guesswork. My first thought was that the panels are too big - 48px, which seemed overly large. So I don't hate the tiling, and one of the layout options is "floating" so you can have a workspace full of floating windows. At the bottom of the left panel are the system icons (normally in the upper right in Gnome) and then the clock, crammed into bottom-left. The left side panel starts at the top-left with the search button that does the Gnome activities overlay, then a globe icon for each workspace, and a button to create a new workspace. Top is the taskbar, which also has a left icon for the current tiling pattern (fullscreen, tiled vertically, etc). ![]() For background: I really want to love tools like i3 or awesome, but I always go back to Gnome because it juts gets stuff done. ![]()
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