by arcasinky on Sat Apr 28, 2012 5:27 pm
My DE depends on the machine I'm using. At work, I'm a embedded software and driver writer so I routinely have dozens of windows open. Over the years, I've tweaked my workflow to make use of static workspaces (ie. WS 1 is browser/email/chat stuff, WS 2 is for development, WS 3 is for unix testing and development overflow when WS 2 becomes too "busy", WS 4 and WS 5 are windows remote desktop clients for kernel/slave debugging, WS 6 is for document readers). Maybe I'm old and crotchety but I'm most productive when I have this sort of layout available so Gnome Shell's dynamic workspace paradigm just doesn't work for me. If the last window in WS 4 suddenly closes, I don't want that workspace to magically disappear. As such, I still run Gnome2 on my main work machine. When I finally have to upgrade that machine, I guess I'll experiment with MATE or Xfce or maybe even go back to running Enlightenment.
For my other machines that aren't for primary development, I like Cinnamon okay. It still feels a little rough around the edges for configuration and I've had mixed success getting applets to work but I'll cut it some slack since it's made so much progress so quickly.
Aside: I've tried to like Gnome3. Tried it for a week and couldn't find a way to feel productive using it on a traditional desktop or laptop machine. I'd love to see some youtube videos of software developers using Gnome3 as their main environment just to see what their workflow looks like.