Depending on your DE, you can have those no problem. You just symlink to the respective .desktop file for the program you want to run. So for example, if you wanna start Firefox from your desktop, you’d look for a file called Firefox.desktop on your system (probably living under /usr) and symlink to that from ~/Desktop.
hmm. I have to admit I don’t understand the difference. on windows it’s the desktop folder, plus a few separate icons to system utilities with some way to filter them. did you mean that?
Desktop shortcuts
Depending on your DE, you can have those no problem. You just symlink to the respective
.desktop
file for the program you want to run. So for example, if you wanna start Firefox from your desktop, you’d look for a file calledFirefox.desktop
on your system (probably living under/usr
) and symlink to that from~/Desktop
.Its not the same.
what parts of it do you miss exactly?
On Windows it feels like a feature. On Gnome it feels like the desktop folder being shown on the Desktop.
hmm. I have to admit I don’t understand the difference. on windows it’s the desktop folder, plus a few separate icons to system utilities with some way to filter them. did you mean that?
I honestly don’t know.
The Cmd + Space combo on MacOS was a game changer. Finds EVERYTHING on the computer.