You absolutely don’t need to know what that means, and you don’t have to wait for it either.
Those are specific things some users want on one desktop environment/window manager, and not necessary to run Linux.
Jumping if you want to and experience it for yourself. I’ve been happily gaming on Linux for 3 years now.
Xx-zones dbus_annotation and ext-tray get merged and implemented into kde and global shortcuts stop sucking and I’ll call it.
I have no idea what any of those words mean and that makes me want to stick to Windows.
You absolutely don’t need to know what that means, and you don’t have to wait for it either. Those are specific things some users want on one desktop environment/window manager, and not necessary to run Linux.
Jumping if you want to and experience it for yourself. I’ve been happily gaming on Linux for 3 years now.
Luckily you don’t need to. I didn’t know either until I read their next comment. And I’ve been using various Linux Distros for 15 years or so.
xx-zones allows windows to place themselves
dbus_annotations allows menu items (like file, edit, etc) to be searchable by other apps
ext-tray allows tray icons to display things other than text in their menus (like sliders or whatever)