GNOME Developers Working To Rethink Their Window Management Approach
GNOME developer Tobias Bernard wrote a lengthy blog post yesterday detailing work being done by the GNOME design team to reimagine their window management behavior with this desktop. Ultimately they are working toward a reimagined approach that will be good enough to be the default behavior rather than opt-in. Some of the key details include:
- Automatically do what people probably want, allow adjusting if needed
- Make use of workspaces as a fully integrated part of the workflow
- Richer metadata from apps to allow for better integration
Our current concept imagines windows having three potential layout states:
- Mosaic, a new window management mode which combines the best parts of tiling and floating
- Edge Tiling, i.e. windows splitting the screen edge-to-edge
- Floating, the classic stacked windows model
This new mosaic mode would be the default behavior and is further detailed in the blog post.
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GNOME developers are working to visualize their new window management experience.
This is a major effort and will involve having more window metadata and likely conducting more user research in some areas. The effort is in its early stages and "definitely 46+ material and likely to take multiple cycles."
More details on this GNOME window management work via this blog post.
