- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/14158942
I did a minimal Fedora 40 installation on my Thinkpad, so it’s possible I missed some package… I don’t have the Power entry in the notification settings; need that one to turn off the absolutely inane notification that the laptop’s about to suspend.
Searched dnf for anything resembling power, came up short. Any idea what to check for?
You can’t even read the title of the window properly, and it’s a short one! And there’s this ugly scramble of icons all clustered on the left. This may work and you may be used to it but Gnome is certainly not designed to be used like that.
Hiding all the buttons as the poster above told you to do is worse though.
yeah, the over-crowdedness is only in the settings app, “normal” apps look fine
Why is it worse? On desktop there are shortcuts and on touch there are gestures. Those buttons are a relict from the last millenium
Because a significant number of people still interact with the desktop via mouse rather than keyboard shortcuts.
Hell, I use hot keys for most things but I still often prefer to quickly minimize a window with the cursor instead of reaching across the keyboard. The first thing I do with a vanilla Gnome installation is get Tweaks on there and restore window buttons.