On Tuesday, September 1, 2015, Timo Jyrinki <<a href="mailto:timo.jyrinki@gmail.com">timo.jyrinki@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">2015-09-01 1:15 GMT+03:00 Len Ovens <<a href="javascript:;" onclick="_e(event, 'cvml', 'len@ovenwerks.net')">len@ovenwerks.net</a>>:<br>
> on all flavours... well maybe not Unity (actually I think I did, but<br>
> disliked it so much, I gave up), Unity is a beautiful experience and<br>
> entertaining, but does not make "work" as easy for me.<br>
<br>
It depends on the user, but for me it has been the most suitable for<br>
work. The first reason it gives the biggest amount of screen space to<br>
the apps which I like, and the second reason is that the Super + 1-9<br>
hotkeys are enough for me to quickly start + switch between key apps<br>
dragged to the launcher. Super + F for recent files/file search and<br>
Ctrl + Super + Arrows and Super + W/S for window manipulation complete<br>
the set of what I usually use. Another flexibility is that it using<br>
Compiz means it's pretty customizable (aside from the usual woes of<br>
lack of Unity specific location settings), for example one could set<br>
certain apps to always start to certain workspace etc.<br>
<br>
But, it depends, like said. For some/many users it's seen as clunky UI<br>
that's mouse driven but meant for touch screens from design<br>
perspective. In my opinion that's only the surface.<br>
<br>
-Timo<br><br>
</blockquote><div>Funny how people are different. I use den,<span></span> for the same reasons you specified above, which probably is on the other end of the scale. </div><div><br></div><div>/Jimmy </div>