Some time ago Gnome had some option to automatically save and restore the
state of the user's desktop session, but that option seems to have been
removed. Are there any plans to bring back that feature?

That ability is arguably even more important now than before since Gnome
software has started asking the user to reboot for all software updates. If
users are asked to interrupt their workflow and quit everything they have
open in order to update their browser, they may simply choose to postpone
software updates. This is obviously not optimal from a security point of
view. But the average user isn't likely to appreciate this; putting off
updates in order to avoid rebooting became so ingrained in the Windows
culture that that Windows started forcing reboots (even at the cost of data
loss) to make users apply security patches. A robust session restore
capability that lets users easily resume where they left off would help
reduce the cost of keeping up with security updates.

It seems that several other desktop environments have some ability to
restore all windows at the next login. KDE and Xfce for example can both do
this, at least for applications written in the native graphical frameworks.
Similarly OS X added some time ago a systemwide API for applications to
save and restore their state. Are there any similar plans in the works for
Gnome/GTK?
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