Still playing around with virtual machines...
... and being even more disappointed than I expected by the latest Ubuntu, I decided, following hints from there, to give Mint 19 Cinnamon a try.
I stand by my motorcycle simile, if Kubuntu 18 is the Ducati 916, Ubuntu 19 is the little scooter, Mint 19 Cinnamon is... a KTM Duke 125 at best.
(For those like WWDERW who don't like motorcycles, obviously googling the terms and looking at the images will give you a good idea).
Now, Cinnamon looks to me like an attempt to "KDEize" Gnome. A half-hearted one at best, but in the right direction.
As opposed to U19, where the installed apps ranged from pathetic to unusable, on M19 the apps are pretty solid (even though a bit scrimpy) and installing new ones actually worked - whereas on U19 almost none of the ones I tried did.
It has nemo as file manager as default - instead of that horrid boiled-cabbage version of Nautilus U19 has.
Whereas on U19 I had to install obvious things like curl and inxi, M19 had them already.
The visual/usability aspect, though slightly better that the U19 refried Gnome, is still so many light-years away from KDE that... well, I don't know.
One might say, Cinnamon is streamlined, it's almost, but not quite, vaguely in the KDE direction...
Except, look:
The "cinnamon" process is always between 22% and 30%. Whereas the "gnome-shell" one is usually around 5%.
Now, on my host, the "plasmashell" one is usually well below 1%. OK, the VM only uses 2 of my 4 cores.
Still.
- So much for KDE bein a resource hog.
- So much for Cinnamon being "light".
More to come, I guess. I've only used it for a couple of hours or so.
... and being even more disappointed than I expected by the latest Ubuntu, I decided, following hints from there, to give Mint 19 Cinnamon a try.
I stand by my motorcycle simile, if Kubuntu 18 is the Ducati 916, Ubuntu 19 is the little scooter, Mint 19 Cinnamon is... a KTM Duke 125 at best.
(For those like WWDERW who don't like motorcycles, obviously googling the terms and looking at the images will give you a good idea).
Now, Cinnamon looks to me like an attempt to "KDEize" Gnome. A half-hearted one at best, but in the right direction.
As opposed to U19, where the installed apps ranged from pathetic to unusable, on M19 the apps are pretty solid (even though a bit scrimpy) and installing new ones actually worked - whereas on U19 almost none of the ones I tried did.
It has nemo as file manager as default - instead of that horrid boiled-cabbage version of Nautilus U19 has.
Whereas on U19 I had to install obvious things like curl and inxi, M19 had them already.
The visual/usability aspect, though slightly better that the U19 refried Gnome, is still so many light-years away from KDE that... well, I don't know.
One might say, Cinnamon is streamlined, it's almost, but not quite, vaguely in the KDE direction...
Except, look:
The "cinnamon" process is always between 22% and 30%. Whereas the "gnome-shell" one is usually around 5%.
Now, on my host, the "plasmashell" one is usually well below 1%. OK, the VM only uses 2 of my 4 cores.
Still.
- So much for KDE bein a resource hog.
- So much for Cinnamon being "light".
More to come, I guess. I've only used it for a couple of hours or so.
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