So I have a two monitor setup, and I really dislike how gnome only lets you have the bar on the primary screen unless you install a plugin that is very outdated and I cannot get working on the latest version of gnome or use dash to dock, and I am not a fan of the dock style…
Then with KDE is kinda nice, but then I have to keep the panel at the bottom of both monitors in sync manually for pinned items… I am just curious if this bothers others and if there is a DE that doesn’t really have this issue or any workarounds people know of.
- Cinnamon works very well for this. I can put bars all over the place on any monitor. - Does Mint let you do that? I was mildly annoyed about having the “bar” only on one screen, I did some looking around but didn’t find anything useful. - Right click bar > ‘Add a new panel’ - Hey it actually works! But it only gives me an empty one 😅 - Yep, then right click it and click applets and add what you need them move the applets to where you want. - Is there some way to mirror the original bar? I’d like access to open folders & softs on both. - Thanks again! - If you mean copy/pasting the bar to the new screen/placement, I’m not sure. I’ve never gotten it to do anything other than create a new empty bar. When you look through the applets though it shows which ones you are already using and what they do so you can just click the + when you’re editing you new bar to add the thing you know you’ll want there. - Also, try out Cinnamenu, it’s better than stock start menu imo. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- So I have a two monitor setup, and I really dislike how gnome only lets you have the bar on the primary screen unless you install a plugin that is very outdated and I cannot get working on the latest version of gnome or use dash to dock, and I am not a fan of the dock style… - I believe both Dash to Panel and V-Shell are capable of resolving this issue in a way that should suit your needs IF you wish to continue using GNOME. 
- Yes missing mirroring in the KDE Plasma panels is annoying. - But I would just stick with KDE, it may get fixed soon. - To my knowledge, COSMIC desktop mirrors the panels to both screens. 
- I dont have a DE reccomendation, but for gnome you can use the dash to panel extension for a KDE / Windows like taskbar that will sync pinned items across monitors. The multi monitor sync works pretty well on it. 
- I believe that XFCE comes with native multiple-monitor support. It sounds like having customizability for both monitors in terms of dock/panel is important, and I’m not completely certain, but XFCE’s panels should be completely rearrangeable and separate. They also have decent power in terms of widgets and customizability. - However, KDE and Gnome have more ecosystem features, so if that’s important, you might consider that when switching. - Another thing to note is that if you are willing to invest some time, window managers could be the way to go. Most don’t have DE features out-of-the-box like KDE, Gnome, or XFCE, so there is a certain ease-of-use gap. But, if you are willing to take the time to get the features you need and learn the environment, window managers work well with multiple monitors. I use AwesomeWM and configure my monitors with ARandR. You can customize your monitors to your heart’s content. - I use xfce for as many monitors as I can plug in. It works, though more customization sounds lovely. - Looking forward to trying out AwesomeWM. Thanks for the idea! 
 
- The upcoming Cosmic desktop by Pop!_OS has the exact feature you’re describing. - I’m really looking forward to having sane functionality without needing a dozen extensions, and still have a couple things I just can’t quite reconcile. I tried to like Plasma, but once again, I just can’t stand using it for more than a month or two. And I don’t have time to get a more basic compositor working the way I want, like I did back in the Fluxbox/Openbox days, especially with how complex things have become. - I really hope System76 and XFCE both hurry up. 
- That will be awesome 
 
- Dash to panel seems to work fine. The only problem i had with gnome on two screens was when they had different scaling. 
- I have my status bar on both monitors by default on Hyprland. 
- I’m a big fan of tiling window managers like i3 or awesome (awesome wm). Awesome is the one I use. It’s tiling and the entire interface is built from scripts that they encourage you to modify. Steep learning curve but once you get it how you like, there’s nothing like it. 





