I think they mean HDR and some ancillary things have taken longer to implement.
This is true, but it’s important to remember that a huge amount of this work on Plasma was spearheaded by Valve. Gnome doesn’t have that going for them.
Gnome also generally doesn’t enable things until it’s implemented in a way that they feel is very polished and isn’t a workaround. Plasma’s HDR implementation was pretty whacky for a while.
There are some areas where Gnome is ahead of Plasma, but most PC users don’t really care about it, so it never gets mentioned (understandably so).
Accessibility in Gnome is better than any other DE, IMO, and it’s getting better. Not many people actually use these options though, and even the people that use one accessibility feature don’t often use other accessibility features. So Gnome being pretty great in that regard flies completely under the radar.
“Adaptive” apps are something Gnome is great at, too. Take virtually any Libadwaita/GTK4 app, and resize it, they work remarkably well at any size. Size it really small and it’ll even (extremely seamlessly) turn into a pretty great phone UI. I find it pretty incredible tbh, but it’s of little use right now because Linux phones aren’t really a thing. If we get a future of Linux phones, though, Gnome seems really well positioned for that.
I think they mean HDR and some ancillary things have taken longer to implement.
This is true, but it’s important to remember that a huge amount of this work on Plasma was spearheaded by Valve. Gnome doesn’t have that going for them.
Gnome also generally doesn’t enable things until it’s implemented in a way that they feel is very polished and isn’t a workaround. Plasma’s HDR implementation was pretty whacky for a while.
There are some areas where Gnome is ahead of Plasma, but most PC users don’t really care about it, so it never gets mentioned (understandably so).
Accessibility in Gnome is better than any other DE, IMO, and it’s getting better. Not many people actually use these options though, and even the people that use one accessibility feature don’t often use other accessibility features. So Gnome being pretty great in that regard flies completely under the radar.
“Adaptive” apps are something Gnome is great at, too. Take virtually any Libadwaita/GTK4 app, and resize it, they work remarkably well at any size. Size it really small and it’ll even (extremely seamlessly) turn into a pretty great phone UI. I find it pretty incredible tbh, but it’s of little use right now because Linux phones aren’t really a thing. If we get a future of Linux phones, though, Gnome seems really well positioned for that.
Or if you get Linux in VR/AR. Not only Linadwaita, but also the accessibility features will come in handy then.