On Monday December 01 2025 10:16:34 Richard Troy wrote: >I never said it wasn't useful to someone only that I didn't see the use-case. >I >still can't imagine that need is held by a majority.
You hold the community of KDE users in higher esteem than the KDE devs themselves, or so one might deduce from >> It is an accessibility feature for people who have poor hand eye >> coordination — and multiple monitors. and the fact that the feature is "on" by default. Oh, and by the way the default theme and look has blown up since Plasma4 days. >> If you don't need it, turn it off : Right. That's also how we like to handle spam, isn't it? >And as a new feature >thrown in by an "upgrade" its presence was not only unwelcome it was downright >anger-generating because it's so incredibly time-wasting. Here's a thought. People who upgrade without doing a clean install PROBABLY expect the experience to be as uneventful and life-changing as possible. With the main highlight being less bugs and hoops to jump through. (Case in point: I loathe and fear updating my OS and prefer by far to do self-built point upgrades from which I can easily roll back.) The fact that this is rarely the case anywhere is no excuse. >potentially time-wasting settings, either call it out with unavoidable visual >noise to be sure we all got it or, _much_better_ ensure it's OFF as the >default >state. Exactly. >Thanks again, Paul, I was lookinkg to ditch KDE over this issue. You could still ditch the DE, if you can find one that can handle your multi-monitor set-up properly (some things you said before suggest Trinity might be a good alternative for you) ;) R.
