Vanillalite
Ask me about the GAF Notebook
itxaka said:Doesn't it? I remember testing it on xubuntu with notify-send
Maybe I just missed it or else it's something I could manually add. IDK...
itxaka said:Doesn't it? I remember testing it on xubuntu with notify-send
Threi said:yeah I haven't been liking unity so far, might try out xubuntu mself.
Wubi installs: so good.
You can launch new instances by right or middle clicking on the icon. Sadly there's no system for easy switching between them using the icon.panda21 said:gnome 3 is serving me well on my arch machine though, only thing i dislike is the lack of customisation, and the inability to launch more than one of the same program (makes sense for browsers and stuff but not so much for terminals)
Brettison said:Maybe I just missed it or else it's something I could manually add. IDK...
MRORANGE said:Dunno if anyone can help me with this, I got a vps a few days ago, through SSH I installed the ubuntu desk environment and installed VNC, it's all working fine and dandy
I also installed appache but now I wanted to add virtualhost & a mail server, are there any guides on how to do this? appache mysql are installed already
(semi noob with ubuntu been using mostly the gUi side of things)
Threi said:As good as Xubuntu is though...I think Linux Mint is the go-to distro mod if you don't want to deal with unity.
hitsugi said:what's wrong with going with the current ubuntu through gnome? it still has gnome2 right
Pctx said:Happy to see all of the XFCE converts popping up in this thread. >
I'm running 10.04LTS w/ XFCE 4.8 and the thing is a rock. Love it!!
Brettison said:That and Gnome 2 isn't gonna be supported by Ubuntu going forward.
markot said:That said, BRING BACK THE MIN/MAX BUTTONS GNOME 3!
style "xfdesktop-icon-view" {
XfdesktopIconView::label-alpha = 0
#Text colors you can delete these if you want you use gtk theme colors
fg[NORMAL] = "#ffffff"
fg[SELECTED] = "#000000"
fg[ACTIVE] = "#000000"
}
widget_class "*XfdesktopIconView*" style "xfdesktop-icon-view"
Sew said:It's the perfect time for Gnome 2 users to jump to Xubuntu (11.04). XFCE 4.8 now features some of the nice usability touches of Gnome, and is very easy on the eyes. My picture from a few posts back shows it stock:
[mg]http://www.zimagez.com/miniature/screenshot-050611-212102.php[/img]
One thing you'll instantly notice coming from Ubuntu/Gnome2 is the menu. No Applications | Places etc, just the XFCE logo. It's easily customised; after taking that screenshot I changed mine to a grey logo to fit the theme better, and added text ('Applications') to make it a bigger target. I'd like a separate Places menu if possible but I haven't looked into that yet.
The other thing I miss is Gnome's dropdown clock with timezones; I'll be looking into that too.
One thing you'll see on my desktop that isn't stock, is the transparent icon backgrounds. XFCE still has (IMO nasty) background colour blobs beneath icon text on the desktop. There is an old but effective fix for this. Create a new file and enter this:
Code:style "xfdesktop-icon-view" { XfdesktopIconView::label-alpha = 0 #Text colors you can delete these if you want you use gtk theme colors fg[NORMAL] = "#ffffff" fg[SELECTED] = "#000000" fg[ACTIVE] = "#000000" } widget_class "*XfdesktopIconView*" style "xfdesktop-icon-view"
Save it in /home/yourname as .gtkrc-2.0
Go into Appearance settings and toggle between any themes to load the setting.
[edit] Ugh, I linked the wrong image. Fixed now.
Brettison said:I think the general computer rule should be if at all possible shit will fuck up during an OS upgrade no matter the OS. LOL
I'm not sure that logic works, since it just means the catastrophic system shattering update might happen at any time rather than just predetermined intervals.GameplayWhore said:That's why rolling release is such a beautiful concept.
Elfforkusu said:I'm not sure that logic works, since it just means the catastrophic system shattering update might happen at any time rather than just predetermined intervals.
Anyway, did the reinstall, getting all my crap back in order. Not a fan of what they did with the installer's partition thingy though. Why can't I specify that I want to mount something to "/media/maindisk" anymore? C'mon son
I am, yes. It was doing the auto-mount thing, but I use that partition as my primary workspace and the lengthy, incomprehensible GUID directory name was not cutting it.GameplayWhore said:I'll let you know in a year.
Are you trying to manually mount something into the /media tree? As I understand it, that's supposed to be for
automatically mounted-by-label partitions. But it should still be possible. What's it doing exactly?
Elfforkusu said:I am, yes. It was doing the auto-mount thing, but I use that partition as my primary workspace and the lengthy, incomprehensible GUID directory name was not cutting it.
I ended up manually specifying an entry in /etc/fstab. The installer used to do it for me. Is "/media => automount" something that's gained traction, or are they just being ornery?
I guess I could do what I want ("pretty names") with symlinks in the future if necessary...
Well, whether it's /media or /mnt, the installer no longer lets you do either.GameplayWhore said:As I vaguely understand it, manually mounted stuff and stuff in fstab generally goes under /mnt/, and stuff that automatically mounts (and automatically names it based on the label) when you're in a graphical environment.
There's also autofs, in which you specify which drives (by label) will mount, and they automatically mount when you plug them in, and they automatically dismount after a period of disuse. This is what I'm restarting to use now with my media setup.
Clients with certain LAMP stacks. I'm actually moving up to 11.04 right now as I type.Brettison said:Any reason you need the LTS and haven't updated yet? I'm just curious!
Pctx said:Clients with certain LAMP stacks. I'm actually moving up to 11.04 right now as I type.
Watched them both. I don't think he mentions many details at all - beyond all the obvious things that Linux has been struggling with for decades in getting acceptance in desktop use.Brettison said:Mark Shuttleworth Keynote!
Also....
Mark Shuttleworth interview!
The big key is Shuttleworth has a goal of 200 million users. He says there 20 million in, and talks quite extensively about how to grab the next 180. I've never been a big Shuttleworth fan personally, and I'm not saying I agree with him here. That being said he does make some very interesting points, and also makes some points that I've personally been thinking about as I'm part of the new wave of Ubuntu users and showing it off to my friends and family, people who could potentially be part of that 180 million, and what is blocking the way.
aswedc said:- Community get on board with the vision to align with mainstream and business use cases or get out. I agree this is absolutely necessary.
- A lot of open source software is crap and not at all competitive (the amount of open source advocates that can't admit this is astonishing).
- Need to focus on what exactly is holding back the next 180 million from using Ubuntu.