On 28/03/17 16:56, Alberts Muktupāvels wrote:
Well, nautilus is the only exception. I do like how it looks, but other apps are weird, for example gedit. It gets even worse in 3.24: dconf-editor is horrible and file dialogs (Open File/Save File) have the "Ok" and "Cancel" buttons on the titlebar which is very counterintuitive IMO.On Mon, Mar 27, 2017 at 6:50 PM, Gabriel Finkelstein <gabrielfinkelstein gmail com> wrote:
Mmm... well, small things actually. The ones I remember:
- I don't like CSD on EVERYTHING
Why? For example I do like how nautilus looks...
It must be, it's a very noticeable bug. The only one I found is this: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/- gnome-system-monitor has a bug since they moved the graphs axis to the right: all graphs have a 6 second delay, which makes them almost useless.
Is that reported?
show_bug.cgi?id=1166838 . I'll look a little deeper and report it in Gnome bug tracker if I don't find anything.
Yes, that's the one that came with 16.04 LTS. But it's the same with nautilus 3.20 on zesty.
- There is no Preferences option in nautilus (it's in the global menu or AppMenu, if you have one...)
Known bug, probably caused by ubuntu patches and/or because nautilus version is very old, 3.14.x?
Of course, we're in beta 2 already. I try to stick to LTS releases, so hopefully they'll be available in 18.04.- There's no window-buttons and window-title applets. I can't live without them. Although, since I ported them, can't use it as an excuse anymore :)
Thanks to your work these applets are in 3.24, but unfortunately it will not be available in zesty. So will need to wait for 17.10 or next LTS release.
On 27/03/17 12:13, Alberts Muktupāvels wrote:
Like better because?
On Mon, Mar 27, 2017 at 6:12 PM, Gabriel Finkelstein <gabrielfinkelstein gmail com> wrote:
Ok thanks.
I use that version because I'm on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, which I like better than 16.04 (I know..., I'll have to move on eventually :'( ).
On 27/03/17 06:23, Alberts Muktupāvels wrote:
Anyway, what is reason to use that version?Hi,I think that there is no solution in any GNOME Flashback version...
On Sun, Mar 26, 2017 at 1:07 AM, Gabriel Finkelstein <gabrielfinkelstein gmail com> wrote:
Hello everyone,
It's my first time trying out using a 2nd monitor. One issue I'm having is that sometimes I accidentally miss the scrollbars on the windows and end up clicking on the second monitor. I found out there's a setting for Unity called "Sticky edges" which stops the cursor on the edge of the monitor and makes you use more "force" in order to move the cursor to the second monitor. But, as I suspected, it doesn't work on Flashback.
Is there a way to achieve this in Flashback? I'm using version 3.8 (which I know is a bit old). Is there a solution for newer versions?
Thanks.
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