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KDE.
Back when everyone was failing horribly trying to come up with a new desktop that nobody wanted KDE was the only one to get it right.
Instead of trying to shovel some bullshit "next generation" interface down your throat they decided to make all of the interface parts modular.
If you want traditional start menu you can have it, want Mac style dock got that covered, want a touch/table type interface it's in there. If you can't make up your mind you can setup activities to flip back and forth.
KDE. I used to use Gnome but switched over to KDE a few years ago.
GNOME. Been using Linux since before GNOME Shell was a thing and when it became a thing it just clicked for me. In my opinion, it's by far the most polished DE and provides the most elegant and intuitive launcher and workspace switcher of any DE or OS I've used. At least they did, until they fucked it up by moving from vertical to horizontal workspaces and made the workspace previews so small you can no longer see what's in them.
Which is the downside of GNOME. Sometimes their developers are their own worst enemies. Fortunately, there are usually extensions to fix the most egregious "enhancements".
GNOME. I love the ecosystem of apps and the great design and simplicity, even if I sacrifice customization and features.
GNOME is designers trying to develop a DE
KDE is developers trying to design a DE.
I like to say that GNOME is a consumer DE, while KDE is a hobbyist DE. I let my wife use GNOME cause of simplicity, but I use KDE Plasma for my desktops.
KDE Plasma
had to scroll way too much...
Gnome without extensions. It gets out of the way and let's me work. Whenever I have to use something else, it feels like going backwards in time. I used to love tinkering with my system and tried a lot of DE's back in the days. Don't have the time for that anymore.
I did have to adjust though. I think that a lot of the hate gnome gets is because of this. If you espect it to work like a traditional desktop you're going to get frustrated and install too many extensions to make it like one. My advise would be to set aside your presumptions and try it like it's meant to be used. You might be surprised, I know I was...
A while ago I found this video, which explains it in more detail.
I love how minimal and clean Gnome is, I use couple extensions like Blur My Shell, User Themes and couple to show temps and wireless mouse battery. And the search is fast and definitely the best way to open apps or files
KDE
Kde
For a while I used tiling window managers, no DE really, but for the past year or so Iβve been using KDE and really enjoying it again.
GNOME 44 with a couple extensions. I'm a big fan of its general look and feel
Sway and I love it. A bit of a hassle to configure but once it's set up how I like it's then it's great! I tried hyprland for a bit and it was super shiny but I just haven't had the time to tweak.
Gnome. It's minimalistic and extensible.
KDE, but sometimes I use i3 on my laptop
GNOME is perfect for me, 100% vanilla, I don't even have Tweaks installed.
MATE:
I like traditional desktops.
I absolutely love MATE for that exact reason.
GNOME. It doesn't let customization get in the way of me using it, but everything I actually need to change has an extension to do that, even on my Surface.
XFCE. I love how lightweight it is.
GNOME. However, I use ArcMenu and Dash to Panel to get a KDE/Windows style taskbar UX.
Why do I use GNOME then, you might ask? Well, I really like the simplicity and aesthetic of GTK/Adwaita. KDE is too noisy - for example, the built in text editor (Kate) can double as an IDE, when all I'm really looking for is a box I can type in.
Cinnamon for a few years now.
I use Gnome with the pop-os tweaks: shell, launcher, and workspaces. Looking forward to the new COSMIC DE from System76.
Gnome. It just seems simple, elegant and smooth. It does what I need from a DE (not that much, I do a lot in terminal and Emacs). It has good keybindings out of the box and good virtual desktop mechanisms. It was also the first DE with good Wayland support. At first I was unsure if I liked Gnomeβs concept and restrictions, but Iβve grown to like it fast.
TDE aka Trinity Desktop Environment, a fork of KDE 3.
How is it? I've often thought about trying it out. I'm on Plasma 5, but I've never loved Plasma like I loved KDE 3.6. I felt like KDE 4 was a huge regression and didn't recover for years. Still hasn't, really.
KDE, but it doesn't super look like it anymore.
Cinnamon almost exclusively. But sometimes plasma.
Used to be xfce or lxde, but have switched to gone the past 2-3 years.
Using Plasma currently.
Qtile but that's just a WM
Cinnamon on Manjaro.
Yes, I know using Manjaro is cheating, but I could not be arsed to set up a DE by hand for the upteenth time. Manjaro Cinnamon ISO go *brrrrrrrr*
i3
Sway for going on 2 years I think. I do recommend it, and Wayland/tiling wms in general.
I use my own fork that uses bspwm-style "long-side split by default," and a nearly transparent under-the-hood container-squashing refactor that prevents this behavior from causing the tree to become bloated with invisible nodes and start to lag horribly. The fix won't be accepted in Sway since it's the bug is faithfully reproduced from i3, and I haven't had time to rewrite it for i3. But if you use something like sway-autotiling, you've probably noticed the issue.
I3, I love the way itβs workspaces work with multiple monitors.
XFCE usually. Two years ago it didn't support my weird multi monitor configuration, so I still have one computer with Gnome.
Fedora Silverblue here so, Gnome
xmonad on my desktop, KDE on my laptop, haven't felt like setting up xmonad on there and KDE last I checked doesn't work correctly on my desktop since I use the Nvidia viewport settings to get my displays to act as 1080p displays.
I used GNOME but a bunch of angry Linux fanboys told me my worth as a human was nonexistent since I didnβt have XFCE installed so I installed Mac OSX instead. Loving clippy rn.
I use gnome and plasma. Recently more plasma than gnome but I switch between them when there are new versions to explore. :)
Mate desktop with i3 as the window manager. Killer lightweight combo and massive boost to productivity.
KDE on my laptop, XFCE on my media server