It doesn’t do any crazy ricing, as I mostly focused on usability tweaks and automatic installation of my must-have extensions. (Tiling, clipboard manager, dash to dock, desktop icons)
Most notable tweaks include:
- clicking on a running app minimizes it
- clicking on a group of apps brings up their previews
- adds minimize, maximize buttons to windows
- installs flatpak, adds flathub
- install flatpak and snap plugins into gnome-software (doesn’t work on Fedora)
- installs snap
- installs mtp-tools and gvfs-backends on Debian to be able to transfer files from a connected phone
- adds right click > New File
- Super + Shift + S brings up the area screenshot
- Super + E opens the file manager
- Ctrl + Alt + T opens the terminal
(Those already configured on Ubuntu don’t get configured again, obviously.)
I also recorded a short showcase to prove that it works without errors https://youtu.be/xf739ivb9hg
- inb4 snap bad, they are bash scripts. Anyone can delete any command they don’t like. - On Ubuntu, do you also remove the Snap store and install gnome-software? - Do you add the PPAs for updated flatpak version and dependencies like bubblewrap? - Nope, I don’t touch the snap-store on Ubuntus (to be fair I don’t install any snap plugins for gnome software center on Debian/Fedora either). As for flatpak, it’s installed via apt from the regular repos. I didn’t even know there was an up to date PPA. - I know about this but that’s meant for 18.04 and earlier. - Edit: these are good suggestions tho. Something to work on to improve it even more. - I am not sure what distros those PPAs are for, may really just be for old versions. 
 
- I added - sudo apt install gnome-software-plugin-snap gnome-software-plugin-flatpak gnome-softwareLooks like Fedora does not have- gnome-software-plugin-snapor- gnome-software-plugin-flatpakin its repos.- On Fedora is is likely just named differently ;) it for sure has at least Flatpak support. - Background is that flatpak is used directly, not through packagekit. - Have a look at packages.fedoraproject.org - I checked and Fedora dropped support for the snap plugin. https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/enable-snap-in-gnome-software/76134 - These are also the only packages related to gnome-software: - Related Packages gnome-software-devel gnome-software-fedora-langpacks gnome-software-rpm-ostree- From what I remember, their gnome-software already has flatpak support. So all that will be missing is the GUI snap support. Could’ve been worse. - Interesting, thanks for the research! - Snaps are unsandboxed on Systems without AppArmor so they are not a useful cross platform technology anyways. - Yeah, that sucks. I would still want it if I were to use Fedora, as an option. - Yup but people dont care to maintain it. It was barely maintained for a longer time 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- I don’t mean to be that guy, but if you like your desktop a certain way and want to easily configure it you might want to look into Nix and home-manager, it’s difficult to get started but once you have a config that works it lets you set up your whole OS and desktop and lots of apps. - I don’t wish to learn Nix. I’m perfectly fine with Debian/Ubuntu/Fedora. When a new version comes out, all I have to do is change the versions of the extensions according to the new Gnome version. 
 
- Not that it would eliminate every shell command but you should learn Ansible. This is what’s it’s built for. - I was recommended this https://flathub.org/apps/io.github.vikdevelop.SaveDesktop Seems very user friendly and can do everything except for installing software. - Interesting project. Thanks for the share. Just saying Ansible is a more “general purpose” tool, almost a programming language, to configure most anything, not just desktop environments. 
 
 




