I really like the ability to just search "sleep", "shutdown", "restart", etc. Switching between windows and opening search using either the super key or a three finger swipe up is super handy, on Windows the button opens the start menu (where the search is horrible) and a three finger swipe up can open app switcher, where you have to hold your three fingers to go to another app.
Using GNOME extensions to see power usage, CPU usage, memory usage, etc. is very useful. Weird that the "extension list" addon isn't a thing that's on by default. Feel like being able to see all your extensions is a really important part of having extensions. Being able to see the clock at the top took a bit getting used to but makes so much more sense than having it tucked in a corner. I also like the integrated calendar, much better than Window's version where you are unable to see any of your events, not even as a dot!
Using dnf and flatpak to install programs is very smooth and I like being able to update all my programs at once with just "sudo dnf update && flatpak update"! Being able to see the dependencies and progress bars and download speeds is really helpful too. I don't need to search for programs anymore because of a thing called "fuzzy search". It's like magic!
GNOME's UI looks much cleaner than Windows, everything is actually cohesive. It's not a mix of flat and glass and clear and ancient. It's all adwaita. (that's what you call it, right?)
Something weird was not having the minimise and maximise buttons. I had to enable those myself, which is a bit odd. Now that it is enabled it works fine.
I also really like being able to easily customise themes (everforest) and icons (Papirus!). And if GNOME is considered "not very customisable" in the linux world, KDE, Cinnamon, etc. must be even more customisable! I'm happy with GNOME though, so I probably won't switch DE anytime soon. Maybe when I get a new computer I could try out KDE.
App compatibility was no problem. All the apps I used before (thunderbird, obsidian, joplin, vscodium, godot, etc.) all have linux versions, and the ones that don't (like SumatraPDF and AIMP) have linux alternatives. Okular and Gapless has been working great!
There were very few issues, but there were some nonetheless. OBS Studio footage was very choppy as hardware decoding wasn't working, and I had to dig deep into forums to install drivers for my intel igpu. Now it works fine, so that's good! I also had an issue with a VPN app, but they support an app called "Clash Verge". They only note the Windows and Mac versions on their site, but clash verge has a linux app too, and it works quite well!
I don't play many games, mostly Minecraft and some retro titles. mGBA works fine on linux, and Minecraft java edition supports linux. I've also tried a bunch of linux games like SuperTuxKart and Xonotic and, considering they were made around a decade ago or so (I think) they were really fun! My other games ran fine with Steam installed, Proton and Wine makes them run fine!
I'll be sticking with the penguin as it's fun, playful, and is much cuter than both the window and the apple. :D
For most relatively-nontechnical users, UX is among the most important parts of any OS. As long as it "feels snappy" and doesn't run out of memory too quickly, marginal differences in resource usage won't even register. Ideological considerations about being in control have been there since the beginning of Linux -- it's only the absolute horror of Windows 11 that has brought that to a crisis point that has more people switching.
I make these points out of frustration with some linux software devs who seem to hold UX in contempt. Darktable, for example, is powerful enough to pull tons of market share from the ever-more-expensive-and-resource-hungry Lightroom/Photoshop, but the mediocre UX is a powerful disincentive. "Fork it!" is... an answer. But, despite using Linux, I've never written a line of code. Neither have most of photographers in the world currently using Adobe products. UX is extremely valuable and shouldn't be a second-order consideration.
Neither have most of photographers in the world currently using Adobe products. UX is extremely valuable and shouldn’t be a second-order consideration.
IMO we will never see the year of the linux desktop unless devs on linux understand that their idea of a good UI/UX is not good to everyone, especially the target use case of their software. Focus groups are things that these big for profit companies do, that some random person sitting at home can't easily do.
If gnome was my first experience with Linux I think I never would have lasted with it. Glad it's working for you. Mentioning which distro you went with would be helpful for a post like this btw, especially for anyone considering the change.
I'll probably get flamed for this, but I feel like gnome works really well and is awesome if you just can be okay with change. People aren't really all that good at being open when trying something different
Interestingly, I love the Gnome workflow and could never get into KDE. I tried a KDE distro for a while but it was after I'd tried Gnome and it just didn't click for me.
And if GNOME is considered “not very customisable” in the linux world, KDE, Cinnamon, etc. must be even more customisable
It's more like GNOME doesn't come with a lot of customization options OOTB. You need extra tools -be it Tweaks, Extension Manager or the somewhat archaic Dconf Editor- to unleash the plethora of customization options in a palpable manner.
On the upside, GNOME's extensions do allow for extensive customization with 'ease'. Heck, this often goes beyond what other DEs are capable of (see e.g. PaperWM^[Which has inspired a full-blown WM in Niri.] or Material Shell^[For which Nicco, a KDE developer that also makes content on YouTube, said that its customization (likely) goes beyond what was possible on KDE Plasma at the time.]).
Use a live disk. I would suggest Kubuntu, burn it to a disk or USB drive and choose "try" instead of install. You can play with it and mess it up real good without ever installing anything. When you're done it disappears.
Use a VM to install a KDE distro. This will take up some space, but can be deleted without changing your current system.
Sometimes you don't want to install all the DE's on your system. It's nice to try stuff out as a newbie. When you become more experienced, install of things is easier if you break things.
no the vpn I was using didn't have a native app, so I was looking for alternatives. It uses v2ray, and v2raya wasn't working. Clash verge works though, so it's all good!