I found that especially on older hardware KDE4, or plasma to be more precise, simply requires too many resources. This leaves the user frustrated and thinking "what a load of ball".
Gnome may be inherently ugly to the KDE trained eye but if you want to spend an hour or two tweaking it you can make it look and behave whichever way you like. It is obviously easier on resources and therefore runs quite well on older machines. BUT you have to turn its guts inside out to make it look nice and behave acceptably.
Then there is XFCE of Xubuntu fame, a lightweight desktop manager which, for my taste, is too close to gnome.
Then I recently stumbled across LXDE which doesn't have the pitfalls of Fluxbox but matches its lightning speed. It is based on openbox and does pretty much everything the average user needs.
I've been using LXDE without complaints on my laptop for a week now, would be interested to hear about other experiences, hints, recommendations.
Cheers.
Gnome may be inherently ugly to the KDE trained eye but if you want to spend an hour or two tweaking it you can make it look and behave whichever way you like. It is obviously easier on resources and therefore runs quite well on older machines. BUT you have to turn its guts inside out to make it look nice and behave acceptably.
Then there is XFCE of Xubuntu fame, a lightweight desktop manager which, for my taste, is too close to gnome.
Then I recently stumbled across LXDE which doesn't have the pitfalls of Fluxbox but matches its lightning speed. It is based on openbox and does pretty much everything the average user needs.
I've been using LXDE without complaints on my laptop for a week now, would be interested to hear about other experiences, hints, recommendations.
Cheers.
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