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On 14/12/13 12:10, walt wrote:
> I've been preparing for gnome3 for many months by running it in a 
> virtualbox gentoo-guest machine.  I missed a very important gnome3 feature
> by doing it that way :(
> 
> The gnome-shell desktop has a 'gestures-based' feature, which exposes the
> favorites menu if you move the mouse pointer *very* quickly to the left
> upper corner of the screen.  Who knew?
> 
> Well, I didn't know until yesterday because virtualbox allows the mouse 
> pointer to slide right off of the guest window onto my real desktop without
> notifying the guest machine, apparently.
> 
> Anyway, the active-left-upper-corner feature saves me one annoying extra 
> mouse-click when launching the apps I use all day long.  That one extra 
> mouse-click was a major gnome3 "bug" for me, but now it's just a virtual 
> bug :)
> 
> For us old gnome2 farts who don't know where to begin with gnome3, I'd 
> suggest installing two gnome-shell extensions that may save you many hours
> of bewilderment:
> 
> First, the "settings center" extension, which exposes several important 
> sub-menus that are otherwise nearly impossible to find.
> 
> Second, the "system-monitor" extension, which replaces the multiload 
> gnome-panel applet that I can't live without.  The gnome extension website
> offers several 'system-monitor' applets, but the one I'm now using is the
> one written by 'darkxst'.  So happy :)
> 
> I strongly suggest emerging the 'alacarte' and 'gnome-tweak-tool' packages
> from gnome-extra.  They are not installed by default when emerging 'gnome',
> but I couldn't use gnome without them.
> 
> Happy to answer any gnome3 questions if I can.
> 
> 
> 

Just for reference, I don't think the hot-corner issue a bug but a result of
how it operates.

If i'm not mistaken, the hot corner has to be activated by the mouse cursor
actually hitting the corner.  With the typical way the virtual machine works,
with the mouse not actually 'entering' the environment, it's almost impossible
to hit the corner properly as it transitions seamlessly between the guest and
the host.

Two ways to address this are to use the virtual machine in fullscreen mode
(meaning that the corner really is the corner) or to have the virtual machine
fully capture the mouse (requiring it to be released by use of the 'host' key
(generally Right-CTRL).

If you can, give it a try and let me know if it works :)

- -- 
wraeth
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