What is gnome




















Princeton's WordNet 0. Wiktionary 0. Webster Dictionary 0. Freebase 3. Chambers 20th Century Dictionary 0. Suggested Resources 0. Matched Categories Maxim. Alex US English. David US English. Mark US English.

Daniel British. Libby British. Mia British. Karen Australian. Hayley Australian. Natasha Australian. Veena Indian. Priya Indian. Skip to content. Finely Crafted Every aspect of GNOME 41 has been crafted to fit together as a harmonious whole, providing a consistent and integrated experience.

Learn More. Close Menu. A panel across the top consists of an Activities button, the name of the current application, the time, and status indicators. Selecting Activities opens the Activities overview, which is the primary interface for launching and switching between applications.

Here you see a dock on the left, your open windows in the middle, and your workspaces on the right. A search bar sits at the top of the Activities overview. You can look for apps, files, settings, the time, or the answer the math problems. Since pressing the Super Windows key is a shortcut to the overview, you can open apps and files simply by pressing Super , typing a few letters, and pressing Enter.

GNOME 3 applications lack a titlebar. They save that space to make room for buttons and options. A single X in the top right corner of each window lets you close.

To maximize, drag a window toward the panel at the top of the screen. You can minimize by right-clicking, but the interface encourages you to move extra windows to their own workspaces. GNOME is very customizable, though you wouldn't know it at first glance. You can change most aspects of the interface by heading to extensions. GNOME is heavy on animations. Whenever you enter the Activities overview, your open windows move across the screen so that you can see them all.

This is disorienting for some users. Others simply don't like the way animations make their computers feel more sluggish. They would rather spend system resources on processing applications, not special effects -- especially on older hardware.

This leads to an awkward experience where options are in the panel for some apps and tucked away in menu bars for others. More than many other desktop environments, the modern GNOME interface is quite a transition from the traditional paradigm.

Some people simply find it too jarring to make the change. GNOME is an ideal desktop environment for newcomers. While unique, the interface is easy to grasp if you aren't already accustomed to something else.



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