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Xmms, I see. I guess you compiled it yourself.
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@ kleiner_husar: Really like what you have done with your desktop!
Actually beautiful, nice effect. Super cool!
...and welcome to the forum!
cheers
zephyr
CROWZ
easier to light a candle, yet curse the dark instead / experience life, or simply ...merely exist / ride the serpent / molon labe / III%ers / oath keepers
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@ ivanonegro : no, I am too lazy ;-) I found some old packages on a pendrive, checked them, and installed manually. The dependencies are so ootdated that they had nothing broken. The real pain int the S was to configure the old gtk theme to harmonize with the actual.
@ zephyr : thx man. I like your distro, too bad I have only 32bit pc's; I cannot install them.
Trinity : I do not really like full-blown DE's, but I must say Tritity is simply amazing. First I installed it on Debian (with systemd) and had always problems with the display-manager startup. After upgrading to Devuan everithing is fine.
And now something non-retro: Ascii with Bunsenlabs Helium.
Last edited by kleiner_husar (2018-07-13 08:31:59)
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@ Nili: STAR and CROWZ both use the JWM setup similar to Manjaro, where the configuration files are in usr/.config/jwm.
Not sure if this was what you were describing as your attempt.
cheers
zephyr
@zephyr , please forgive me, just now i've caught your message. Yes, that's what i mean, if STAR/CROWZ have similar JWM configs it must be excellent for those that are looking for minimalistic stack WM also a nice view of JWM.
Tumbleweed - KDE Plasma (Wayland) - Breeze (LeafDark) [Qt]
♪Mahara★Japaaan!
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Nili wrote:
Yes, that's what i mean, if STAR/CROWZ have similar JWM configs it must be excellent for those that are looking for minimalistic stack WM also a nice view of JWM.
No offense, the broken down JWM configs greatly enhances the overall look and feel allowing greater ease of configuring the WM.
Thank you!
cheers
zephyr
Last edited by zephyr (2018-07-21 07:44:07)
CROWZ
easier to light a candle, yet curse the dark instead / experience life, or simply ...merely exist / ride the serpent / molon labe / III%ers / oath keepers
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I use i3wm. The "cold" start system uses only 114 mb. I got a light and excellent system. Highly productive.
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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Star Jwm 686 32bit, installed in vbox! Running lxterminal & pcmanfm, and under 100mb used!
Have CCR play in the headphones!
Last edited by Ozi (2018-08-11 20:20:36)
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Devuan 2.0.0 ASCII with Awesome wm. Running irssi with #devuan channel, htop, cmus with radio station "SomaFM" amd neofetch
Clean desktop
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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CROWZ
easier to light a candle, yet curse the dark instead / experience life, or simply ...merely exist / ride the serpent / molon labe / III%ers / oath keepers
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I finished upgrading to my new hacker resistant model.
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I finished upgrading to my new hacker resistant model.
"hacker resistant" ? what algorithms are you using on that system
Learner of new ideas
Retired Computer Technician
US Army 2001-2006
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...what algorithms are you using on that system
I call it "hack, saw, and polish".
My methodology hasn't caught on yet.
Maybe the more clever name would be "The Reverse Poettering".
Last edited by thezeit (2018-09-11 21:53:02)
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Xfce, greybird themes, bengal tiger
http://i.imgur.com/QAAXpur.png
Last edited by ChuangTzu (2018-09-20 00:42:04)
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fanderal: There is no Fluxbox guide in the documentation and I have never tried this desktop environment. Did you create a file that explains the necessary steps to get a similar result? I am going to give it a try.
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Devuan Ascii with Cinnamon desktop. Network config with Wicd. Input method is ibus.
Last edited by Debuser2018 (2018-09-30 19:08:51)
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I have never tried this desktop environment.
HextorBRX, this is simply a window mgr and a file mgr. For some, it's all they want or need. I made it workable for me by adding commands to the Fluxbox menu so it has some functions similar to a real DE.
As an example, there's no DE, so there's no auto-mounting USBs or DVDs. In the screenshot where the menu is open to Utils, one of the unseen labels under USB is Mount1. When I click on it, the underlying command mounts a USB drive and opens it in Rox-filer with read/write permissions.
There is no Fluxbox guide in the documentation
The only documentation I vaguely recall was about the style files, but it's been years since I edited the Cthulhain file or looked at the Fluxbox wiki.
Did you create a file that explains the necessary steps to get a similar result?
No, I didn't. At least, not when I edited that style file. The desktop image in red was originally blue, and I used a blue theme. I changed it to red a year or so ago and kept some notes.
If you want to give it a try, I'll be happy to get into the details with you. An alternative, if you're already using a DE, is setting up Fluxbox with a similar look, but as a session choice at login... you'll still have a Control Panel and the DE's automated functions.
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Hands down i think refracta linux is probably one of the best distros out there as it is so fast to install and boot and just works, well done fsmithred and co.
Been playing around with refracta2 xfce tonight with some theming. Replaced xfce4 panel with tint2 and added jgmenu for the menu. I much prefer tint2 as a panel, to me it has a lot more avenues for styling than xfce4 panel. Jgmenu is brilliant and has come a long way, i urge you to try it out with tint2. The task buttons in that particular tint2 panel follow the colour of the icons via tinting.
Last edited by Panopticon (2018-10-15 15:53:19)
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Replaced xfce4 panel with tint2 and added jgmenu for the menu. I much prefer tint2 as a panel, to me it has a lot more avenues for styling than xfce4 panel. Jgmenu is brilliant and has come a long way, i urge you to try it out with tint2.
I didn't know about jgmenu. I was working on another dynamic menu, using also the libmenu-cache (like jgmenu seems to be doing):
If you work systematically, things will come by itself (Lev D. Landau)
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Hi aitor, i will have to try your popupmenu, thanks.
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