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18 changes: 8 additions & 10 deletions docs/desktop/gnome/onlineaccounts.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ contributors: Steven Spencer

## Introduction

GNOME's Online Accounts feature seems unassuming at first, but it is actually quite powerful. If you want to access your email, tasks, files in cloud storage, online calendars, and more, all from your desktop apps within minutes, the Online Accounts feature is exactly the way to get that done.
At first, the GNOME Online Accounts feature seems unassuming, but it is pretty powerful. It allows you to access your email, tasks, files in cloud storage, online calendars, and more from your desktop apps within minutes.

In this short guide, you will see how to get started.

Expand All @@ -16,31 +16,29 @@ This guide assumes you have the following:

* Rocky Linux with the GNOME desktop environment installed.

That is all you need.

## How to add your online accounts

Open up the GNOME Activities overview in the top left corner (or with the ++meta++ or ++win++ key), and search for Online Accounts. Alternatively, you can open up the Settings panel, and find Online Accounts on the left side.
Open up the GNOME Activities overview in the top left corner (or with the ++meta++ or ++win++ key), and search for Online Accounts. Alternatively, you can open the Settings panel and find Online Accounts on the left side.

Either way, you will end up here:

![a screenshot of the GNOME Online Accounts settings panel](images/onlineaccounts-01.png)

!!! Note
!!! note

You may have to click on a three-vertical-dots icon to access all the options, shown here:
You may have to click on a three-vertical-dots icon to access all the options shown here:

![a screenthot of the Online Accounts panel featuring the three-vertical-dots icon at the bottom](images/onlineaccounts-02.png)

To add an account, click on one of the options. For your Google account, you will receive a prompt to log in to Google with your browser, and authorize GNOME to access all of your data. For services like Nextcloud, you will see a login form like the one below:
To add an account, click on one of the options. For your Google account, you will receive a prompt to log in to Google with your browser and authorize GNOME to access all of your data. For services like Nextcloud, you will see a login form like the one below:

![a screenshot showing the login form for Nextcloud](images/onlineaccounts-03.png)

Complete the relevant information, and GNOME will take care of the rest.

## Account types supported by GNOME

As you can see in the screenshots, Google, Nextcloud, Microsoft, Microsoft Exchange, Fedora, IMAP/SMTP, and Kerberos are all supported to some extent. However, these integrations are not made equal.
As you can see in the screenshots, Google, Nextcloud, Microsoft, Microsoft Exchange, Fedora, IMAP/SMTP, and Kerberos are all somewhat supported. However, these integrations are not made equal.

Google accounts get the most functionality, though Microsoft Exchange and Nextcloud are not too far behind.

Expand All @@ -57,10 +55,10 @@ To make it easy to know exactly what is and is not supported, here is a table th

!!! Note
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!!! Note
!!! note


While "tasks" are not listed in the table above, they *are* seemingly supported, at least for Google. Testing for this guide revealed that if you install the Endeavour to-do manager (available via Flathub) on Rocky Linux, and already have a Google account connected to GNOME, your tasks will be imported automatically.
While "tasks" are not listed in the table above, they *are* seemingly supported, at least for Google. Testing for this guide revealed that if you install the Endeavour to-do manager (available via Flathub) on Rocky Linux and already have a Google account connected to GNOME, your tasks will be imported automatically.

## Conclusion

While you can certainly use the web app versions of some of these services, or use third-party clients in some cases, GNOME makes it easy to simply integrate many of the most important features straight into your desktop. Just sign up and go.
While you can certainly use the web app versions of some of these services or third-party clients in some cases, GNOME makes it easy to integrate many of the most important features straight into your desktop. Just sign up and go.

If any service appears to be missing, check out the [GNOME community forums](https://discourse.gnome.org) and let them know.