I should note that desktop-icons-ng living in a separate process is a very good thing. It means CPU and memory usage of the extension is clearly in a separate process from gnome-shell. There's very little desktop-icons-ng can do to slow down the shell, other than redrawing too much of the desktop too often (because it's a big window).
I should note that desktop-icons-ng living in a separate process is a very good thing. It means CPU and memory usage of the extension is clearly in a separate process from gnome-shell. There's very little desktop-icons-ng can do to slow down the shell, other than redrawing too much of the desktop too often (because it's a big window).