Linux App
I've installed RTM on Ubuntu (Lubunt) 23.04. The application loads and functions, but there are a couple bugs/quirks:
1. Left-clicking dock icon does not maximize, minimize or manipulate the app window in any way; they appear disconnected. (The dock icon appears correctly, and right-click reveals a functional menu for adding tasks, preferences, etc.)
2. The app window icon appears broken (displays a generic app icon). The app window does not "hide to dock" when minimized, but appears on the taskbar (LXQt) at all times.
I can probably fix the broken icon, but I'm not sure how to re-bind the dock icon and app window. Any suggestions?
Finally, it looks like the last Linux-related post was over a year ago. Is development for the Linux desktop client dead? Are there any plans to migrate to a Progressive Web App?
1. Left-clicking dock icon does not maximize, minimize or manipulate the app window in any way; they appear disconnected. (The dock icon appears correctly, and right-click reveals a functional menu for adding tasks, preferences, etc.)
2. The app window icon appears broken (displays a generic app icon). The app window does not "hide to dock" when minimized, but appears on the taskbar (LXQt) at all times.
I can probably fix the broken icon, but I'm not sure how to re-bind the dock icon and app window. Any suggestions?
Finally, it looks like the last Linux-related post was over a year ago. Is development for the Linux desktop client dead? Are there any plans to migrate to a Progressive Web App?
andrewski (Remember The Milk) says:
Hi ndmaxwell,
Thanks for reporting both issues! I'll add those to our list to investigate. Sorry for the inconvenience in managing the app window!
Thanks for reporting both issues! I'll add those to our list to investigate. Sorry for the inconvenience in managing the app window!
Thanks @andrewski. For what it's worth, a docking icon can be otherwise handled (e.g. KDocker). Just nuking the task area icon and letting the RTM Linux app function like a regular progressive web app (which is what it appears to be) would make that kind of solution feasible - even as an interim.