The GNOME desktop is one of the most complete and accessible desktop environments in the Linux ecosystem. It’s the default experience in popular distributions like Fedora and Debian, and it’s one of the primary options available in most others. Regardless of which distribution you choose, when you fire up a GNOME desktop, the default applications tend to be the same. You will likely see Firefox and LibreOffice alongside GNOME-specific applications like Gedit, Nautilus, Cheese, Calculator, Clocks, and Terminal. There are plenty of applications to choose from in your distribution’s app repositories, but only GNOME apps will have buttons in the…
Read the full article: 10 Awesome GNOME Apps that Didn’t Come With Your Distro