Historically, "Super" first appeared on a keyboard in 1980.

Today, in the context of linux, Super is usually an alternate name for the
Windows key.

You should be able to define alternate key combinations if you don't have a
physical windows key.  I know that in KDE, the "run program" dialog can be
produced by "Alt-F2"  I'm not sure about Gnome3, but you should be able to
figure it out.

Most of these things have nothing specifically to do with Centos, but with
the desktop environment.  I assume that KDE for Centos8 will be in EPEL
eventually.  There will probably be many other desktop environments
available too.  They exist for Fedora, so it is a matter of time before
someone builds on Centos8.



On Wed, Oct 9, 2019 at 1:19 PM Larry Linder <larry.lin...@micro-controls.com>
wrote:

> What is   super + tab     ?????
>
> Did someone redefine the kayboard  ?
>
> A lot of our keyboards do not have the microsoft window key !!!
>
> So we just toss a bunch of good keyboards to use centos 8
>
> Larry Linder
>


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Jeffrey Anderson                        | jdander...@lbl.gov
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