Gnome blog from 2021 about libadwaita ( blogs.gnome.org )
I thought it might be relevant
System Extensions from Flatpak – Happenings in GNOME ( blogs.gnome.org )
Notifications in 46 and beyond – GNOME Shell & Mutter ( blogs.gnome.org )
fwupd and xz metadata ( blogs.gnome.org )
Fedora Workstation 40 – what are we working on ( blogs.gnome.org )
fwupd: Auto-Quitting On Idle, Harder – Technical Blog of Richard Hughes ( blogs.gnome.org )
On how to fork a GNOME Core app without meaning to do so – GNOME adventures in mobile ( blogs.gnome.org )
Automated testing of GNOME accessibility features – GNOME Accessibility ( blogs.gnome.org )
Testing composefs in Silverblue – Alexander Larsson ( blogs.gnome.org )
Links for more context on what composefs is and why you'd want to use it for your image-based OS (like Silverblue):...
Recent GNOME design work – Form and Function ( blogs.gnome.org )
Looking for LogoFAIL on your local system – Technical Blog of Richard Hughes ( blogs.gnome.org )
Prompt - terminal that marries the best of GNOME Builder’s seamless container support, the beauty of GNOME Text Editor, and the robustness of VTE ( blogs.gnome.org )
100 Million Firmware Updates Supplied By The LVFS – Technical Blog of Richard Hughes ( blogs.gnome.org )
100 Million Firmware Updates Supplied By The LVFS ( blogs.gnome.org )
A new accessibility architecture for modern free desktops – GNOME Accessibility ( blogs.gnome.org )
Announcing composefs 1.0 – Alexander Larsson ( blogs.gnome.org )
Extensions in GNOME 45 - New import system is not backwards compatible ( blogs.gnome.org )
By now it is probably no longer news to many: GNOME Shell moved from GJS’ own custom imports system to standard JavaScript modules (ESM)....
Gnome is Rethinking Window Management ( blogs.gnome.org )
Gnome: Rethinking Window Management ( blogs.gnome.org )
Rethinking Window Management on GNOME – Space and Meaning ( blogs.gnome.org )
Rethinking Window Management – Space and Meaning ( blogs.gnome.org )
considering last month’s post on Tiling Redesign, this article brought up a few interesting ideas on handling windows...