The trick is having 3 monitors so you can have even more tab groups.
Vivaldi also supports multiple workspaces that can each have their own tab stacks.
The trick is having 3 monitors so you can have even more tab groups.
Vivaldi also supports multiple workspaces that can each have their own tab stacks.
I started using Linux desktops at work around 5 or 6 years ago, and even since then, the experience has improved greatly.
I’ve been on various distros with KDE over the past couple of years, but from what I’ve seen in passing, Gnome “just works” really well with most distros that use it. KDE requires some tweaking occasionally, but since 5.27, it’s been rock solid for me, and the KDE team seems really dedicated to making Plasma 6 stable and easy to use.
You might want to fire up a VM or throw Ubuntu on an old laptop and see how it feels. It really has gotten a lot better for the average user, and something like Mint, imo, is really easy to pick up and just use.
Personally, I really like customization, and I work as a DevOps engineer (formerly linux sysadmin), so I don’t mind getting really deep into the OS if necessary. But I don’t think you have to if you want to have a good experience.
Unfortunate, but to be fair, things have changed a lot in 20 years.
There are definitely still angry linux nerds on forums, but I think the experience is a lot more streamlined.
They upgraded
VanillaOS is pretty much what you’re asking for. The only real downside right now is that Orchid probably won’t have KDE support out of the gate
Yeah but a $100 airbnb vs a $225 hotel is a different discussion
It’s not Manjaro
I really hope journalists stop called IBM Red Hat. Red Hat is dead.