When you use Linux, there are two dominant and well-established desktop environments that reign supreme: KDE and GNOME. I prefer GNOME, but there’s one KDE feature so good that I’ve found a way not to do without.
This feature is KDE Connect
It seamlessly integrates my Android phone with my GNOME desktop
Apple fans will tell you: owning an iPhone and a MacBook just works. You can view incoming messages and notifications on your Mac, and it’s largely painless to send files back and forth between the two. With KDE Connect, the same can be said about Linux.
KDE Connect is a small program that you install both on your desktop and your phone. You then pair the two devices together. It’s a simple process, after which you now have a direct line of communication between the two.
Despite the name, KDE Connect is not exclusive to KDE
KDE Connect is surprisingly easy to install on nearly anything
KDE is not a KDE-exclusive feature, nor is it intended to be. The name simply comes from the community and project that make the software available. The team proudly states that KDE Connect is available for all major Linux distributions and supports all desktop environments. It explicitly mentions that GNOME users may prefer to install the GSConnect extension instead of the KDE Connect desktop app for even more integration.
You can see GSConnect in the screenshot above, which I’ve installed simply by searching for it within the Extension Manager app. It integrates KDE Connect’s functionality directly into the panel on my desktop. Accessing these features then becomes as easy as connecting to a Wi-Fi network or managing my Bluetooth devices.
The KDE Connect Android app is easy to find both in the Play Store and on F-Droid, an alternative app store that exclusively ships free and open source software. You can also get an iOS version from the Apple App Store.
I work exclusively with Linux and Android, but you can also install KDE Connect on a Windows PC via the Microsoft Store. There are also ARM and Intel nightly builds available for macOS.
KDE connects my GNOME desktop, tablet, and Android phone
I have the full range of features even on non-KDE systems
This is one of the things I love most about Linux—KDE Connect does not exist to lock you into the KDE ecosystem, and the version I run on GNOME is not some unofficial hack. GSConnect is able to implement the same functionality you get from installing KDE Connect on a PC running KDE Plasma. The GNOME implementation is so seamless, you may even prefer it the KDE Connect experience on KDE Plasma.
Incoming phone notifications pop up on my desktop just like desktop notifications. When text messages arrive, I can respond to them directly on my computer. I particularly appreciate how easy it is to send files back and forth. I can take 50 photos on my phone, highlight them in my gallery app, tap the share icon, and select KDE Connect as the destination. Those 50 photos then instantly appear in the Downloads folder on my desktop. If I want to work with more files than that, I can simply view the contents of my phone directly within the GNOME Files app on my computer and move files between the two devices however I wish.
Likewise, I can use KDE Connect to sync together two Linux desktops. I have GSConnect installed on both my desktop and my Star Labs StarLite Linux tablet that also runs Fedora Silverblue.
- Brand
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Star Labs
- Storage
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512GB, 1TB, 2TB
The StarLite is a tablet from Star Labs that ships with one of several available Linux distributions, Windows, or no operating system at all. An optional keyboard case is available, and the tablet works with MPP active pens.
The feature I use most, perhaps, is the ability to quickly share text. If someone texts me a website that I would prefer to view on my desktop later when I’m at my computer, I can simply copy the text, tap the share icon, watch the words appear on my desktop, and then paste those words into my browser. Sometimes this is simpler than going through my browser, despite how well Firefox syncing actually works.
I’m someone who has come to rely heavily on voice dictation to do my job. I’m speaking the first draft of these words right now into my Murena Fairphone 6. I will then sit down at my computer, share the entire draft to my desktop, copy the text directly into the Apostrophe app or Firefox, and edit the words there.
- Brand
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Murena
- Display
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6.31 inches
The Murena Fairphone (Gen. 6) is the perfect option to bring together privacy and sustainability. Powered by the /e/OS operating system, the Fairphone (Gen. 6) protects you and your data at all times, while at the same time protecting the planet.
KDE Connect on GNOME even includes some of the advanced features that I personally don’t make much use of, like being able to use the phone as an input method for the computer or using one device to send remote terminal commands to another.
KDE Connect is the glue that holds Linux devices together
I love the GNOME desktop environment and its minimalist approach to design, but it does lack some of the sheer functionality available in KDE land. I fully understand why some of my colleagues prefer KDE Plasma. I’m just happy that, as a perfectly content GNOME user, I don’t have to do without the beauty that is KDE Connect.




