Hi all,
This isn’t a request for help — I know how to use fstab, I’ve symlinked my folders, I’ve mounted all my drives. I’m here because this experience is broken by design, and I want to start a real conversation about it.
I have a modern PC with multiple internal drives:
But here’s the reality:
Every time I try to save a file, I get dropped into ~/Documents, as if the other drives don’t even exist. Most programs don’t remember where I last was. There’s no system-wide way to intuitively navigate, remember, or work with multiple drives from save/load dialogs — not even with Dolphin doing everything right in the background.
Why?
This is not a fringe setup anymore. A ton of creators, gamers, professionals, and neurodivergent users run machines like this. It’s not just about power users — it’s about respecting the logic of a well-organized system. Linux is supposed to be modular and flexible — so why is this one basic function so hard-coded into $HOME logic that doesn’t suit most people anymore?
If there’s a tool, framework, or actual movement trying to solve this — I’d love to hear about it. If there isn’t, then I want to start building toward something better. Even just naming this friction point feels overdue.
Thanks for hearing me out.
— Fiona
This isn’t a request for help — I know how to use fstab, I’ve symlinked my folders, I’ve mounted all my drives. I’m here because this experience is broken by design, and I want to start a real conversation about it.
I have a modern PC with multiple internal drives:
- One for the OS (as it should be) SSD
- One for projects and documents HD
- One for game installs and modding SSD
- One for AI and archive storage HD
But here’s the reality:
Every time I try to save a file, I get dropped into ~/Documents, as if the other drives don’t even exist. Most programs don’t remember where I last was. There’s no system-wide way to intuitively navigate, remember, or work with multiple drives from save/load dialogs — not even with Dolphin doing everything right in the background.
Why?
This is not a fringe setup anymore. A ton of creators, gamers, professionals, and neurodivergent users run machines like this. It’s not just about power users — it’s about respecting the logic of a well-organized system. Linux is supposed to be modular and flexible — so why is this one basic function so hard-coded into $HOME logic that doesn’t suit most people anymore?
If there’s a tool, framework, or actual movement trying to solve this — I’d love to hear about it. If there isn’t, then I want to start building toward something better. Even just naming this friction point feels overdue.
Thanks for hearing me out.
— Fiona

