My KDE setup is neither like Windows nor like MacOS.
Stock options are often laid out similarly to Windows to make transition smoother. But many of them are powerful enough to make the UI look radically different according to your needs.
Not on my PC rn, but here’s the previous iteration, arguably in between two styles (and also with broken font size in one place, which was fixed later). I like how Mac organizes panels on the top, but I hate the dock panel. The desktop also has KRunner activate near the screen center whenever I type when I’m focused in desktop, so that I could find any apps or perform simple actions super quickly. Still, I decided to not have it open when it’s not running, as I prefer minimalism.
My KDE setup is neither like Windows nor like MacOS.
Stock options are often laid out similarly to Windows to make transition smoother. But many of them are powerful enough to make the UI look radically different according to your needs.
Show me
Not on my PC rn, but here’s the previous iteration, arguably in between two styles (and also with broken font size in one place, which was fixed later). I like how Mac organizes panels on the top, but I hate the dock panel. The desktop also has KRunner activate near the screen center whenever I type when I’m focused in desktop, so that I could find any apps or perform simple actions super quickly. Still, I decided to not have it open when it’s not running, as I prefer minimalism.
Also, here is a strikingly unique but lovely desktop taken from r/unixporn