cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/19442327

It’s a known bug from upstream mutter. A fix is being worked on and there’s a PPA with the updated packages by the Ubuntu developer working on the fix. It resolved the problem on my end.

  • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Yes, there must be. There’s not any discernable delay in typing or anything like that, it’s certainly no slower than Plasma when clicking or typing anything, and it’s a hell of a lot faster than Windows.

    If you are being truthful, you are experiencing some kind of issue.

    • TCB13@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      There’s not any discernable delay in typing

      Typing is fine, just minimize a window on GNOME and then to the same on Xfce and you’ll see the difference. Xfce = window instantly gone, no special effects. GNOME random minimize / fade animation.

        • TCB13@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Just because a slight delay doesn’t bother you it doesn’t mean it isn’t there. The first times I used GNOME I actually was convinced it was some issue with my computer / setup. After countless installations on different distros and also dealing with it at work and friend’s computers I came to the conclusion that is it slower than Xfce and most likely KDE. There’s no way around it.

          To be fair, as you said in another comment I don’t believe this is CPU bound at all, nor GPU. Multiple machines some Intel with iGPUs others with discrete GPUs, others with AMD, all the same behavior. I’m way more inclined to believe this is an I/O issue above all, GNOME needs to read and load a lot more stuff than Xfce to render any window thus it will be slower.

          Anyways, I never experienced this much, but if you google around people that are using older machines say that GNOME is always the slowest thing on those machines. Others such as Xfce they report it as performing better, so if on an old machine the slowdown once using GNOME is noticeable by almost everyone it means it does indeed use more resources. You can throw an i9 to at the issue but the fact is that it will always use more resources no matter of the hardware you have.

          In my case I tend to be particular sensible to small delays than you or others but it’s there and old machines prove it. It’s not that I can’t use Gnome ever or it provides the worst desktop experience ever, no, it works fine and can be productive but I notice the delays.

      • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        You said it wasn’t fine. Now you’re saying it is?

        I started “experiencing input delay / lag in GNOME” since I first used it. It’s normal, every thing you click or type requires a 2s animation to show up, usually rendered with CSS themes. lol

        So am I to understand that your complaint about Gnome has changed from “I have severe performance issues and input lag, even using a desktop i7” to “minimising has a 0.2 second animation, just as practically every other UX has, and rather than just turn it off, I’m going to argue with people about it online and call the entire project shit”

        • TCB13@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          So am I to understand that your complaint about Gnome has changed from “I have severe performance issues and input lag, even using a desktop i7” to “minimising has a 0.2 second animation, just as practically every other UX has, and rather than just turn it off

          No it hasn’t. My complaints about GNOME have expanded a bit, just that. The UI is definitely slower than let’s say Xfce and to make things even worse adds pointless animations.

          and rather than just turn it off

          That’s the issue, you can’t turn off ALL Gnome animations, there’s a toggle on settings that reduces about 90% of the nonsense but you’ll still get some animations.