Nightfox wrote to All <=-
I did some research on what Linux desktop environments look best on a
4K monitor. I kept seeing KDE Plasma recommended, particularly with Wayland (which is a modern replacement for X11, which is designed to perform better and handle modern features better, such as fractional scaling).
Wayland has completely failed on all its goals. It doesn't perform better than X11 (but it doesn't perform worse either). It doesn't offer nearly as much as X11 so it's still not even close to feature-complete.
Right now, if anyone is trying to push you to Wayland, take a good look as to why first.
I did some research on what Linux desktop environments look best on a 4K monitor. I kept seeing KDE Plasma recommended, particularly with Wayland
Since I've been used to using Linux Mint lately, I gave KUbuntu a try
So I fully recognize that perhaps you had some other unmentioned reason for switching distributions, but did you know that with Mint you had an install that fully supports KDE Plasma?
If you were aware, I hope you're enjoying the new experience! :-D
Nightfox wrote to All <=-
I did some research on what Linux desktop environments look best on a
4K monitor. I kept seeing KDE Plasma recommended, particularly with Wayland (which is a modern replacement for X11, which is designed to perform better and handle modern features better, such as fractional scaling).
I did some research on what Linux desktop environments look best on a 4K
monitor. I kept seeing KDE Plasma recommended, particularly with Wayland
(which is a modern replacement for X11, which is designed to perform
better and handle modern features better, such as fractional scaling).
KDE used to be all the rage, I thought -- I used it way back when with SUSE Linux, around 2000. I should try it again, my recollection was that the apps were better back then, but the alternative was prettier.
Also, I've seen people say that although you technically can install KDE in Linux Mint, people generally don't really recommend doing so because KDE isn't officially supported by Linux Mint; and it's better to use a
Also, I've seen people say that although you technically can install KDE
in Linux Mint, people generally don't really recommend doing so because
KDE isn't officially supported by Linux Mint; and it's better to use a
Yes, I suppose if the distro doesn't treat certain packages as first-class citizens, the experience could be shoddy. That's unfortunate, but I guess expected. I'm not a huge fan of those distros that are only good at one thing, but... that's their perogative.
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