top | item 47207190

(no title)

troad | 22 hours ago

The network icon usually contains controls for connecting to and disconnecting from networks, which are obviously useful.

> I guess you'd have to have used Windows to miss it then.

I don't understand what you mean by this. For most of the past 30 years, every major OS had something analogous to a system tray. Win, Mac, KDE, Gnome all had icons next to the clock, that gave access to software running in the background or system functions. Virtually all still do, Gnome (apparently?) does not.

I find it deeply implausible you've never seen or interacted with a system tray.

discuss

order

ErroneousBosh|3 hours ago

Well, I've probably seen it, but it's not really been something I've paid attention to. Except of course maybe the clock, which is present in plain ordinary Gnome whether it has a "system tray" or not.

I don't get why it would be useful.