I used to use gnome, but Wayland is much more mature on KDE right now so I switched. Gnome is much more stable though.
Maybe once gnome reintroduces theming, fixes fractional scaling, and lets you customize GTK again I'll switch back.
Having used both, I actually wouldn't agree with that, at least on Arch Linux I've had more problems with GNOME stability-wise. I think it's because they have a tendency to make breaking changes between releases. Maybe this wouldn't be true for fixed-release distros, though.
Once GNOME reintroduces theming, fixes fractional scaling
Theming is already working, it just took a while for people to get their themes ported/create new themes since theming GTK4/Libadwaita apps and the 40+ shell is so different from before. But as I learned from scrolling unixporn, there's quite a few options available now. And as for fractional scaling, there's a spec that was recently introduced into mainline Wayland for that that GNOME is going to be implementing, though right now the spec is only compatible with QT6 and probably won't support GTK until GTK5. I believe that spec also includes a fix similar to the one Plasma uses for XWayland apps but I might be wrong there.
I feel the same but in reverse. I've heard that the KDE sprint earlier this year included work to get the Overview up to par with GNOME's Activities Overview for Plasma 6, and I might switch back after that releases.
Yep, it's ObsidianMD, like the other person said. There's a ton of stuff there, such as being able to create tons of links between files and even links to files that don't yet exist, and then navigate those links and color code them in the graph view.
I also have RNote for handwritten notes, though that's more specific to Linux where Obsidian is cross platform
I have the perfect meme to reply to this, as soon as I manage to create a .desktop file in the right place to be able to right click -> "open with..." my file in my preferred image editor, you're toast