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Re: My Friends Make Fun of My UI



On Thu, 5 Mar 2015 08:33:22 -0500
Dan Ritter <dsr@randomstring.org> wrote:

> On Thu, Mar 05, 2015 at 01:22:50PM +0100, Wilko Fokken wrote:
> > What I am mostly missing so far under Xfce, compared to Icewm, is a
> > toolbar placed at the BOTTOM of the screen. Using varifocal
> > glasses, I have to strain my neck badly in order to focus the Xfce
> > toolbar at the TOP of the screen through the LOWER area of my
> > glasses.
> 
> You can either move the toolbar or create a second one at the
> bottom. Right click in an empty area of the toolbar (XFCE calls
> it a panel) and you should see options.
> 
> 
> > The second shortcoming of Xfce is (at least by it's defaults) that
> > little attention seems to have been given to the convenient
> > possibilties of the keyboard; once your fingers know their
> > handling, they operate independently of your brain, and you can
> > focus on your problems instead of being permanently distracted by
> > those positioning demands of your mouse.
> 
> There's a shortcut-key editor with quite a lot of control; no,
> it's not fully set up by default.
> 
> > Another exemplary feature of Icewm that I would like to find again
> > under Xfce, are those 3 tiny 5mm-squares(!) placed next to the
> > digital clock into the toolbar, showing permanently the main
> > activities of the system, each using specially coloured top-down
> > rsp. bottom-up indexes:
> > 
> > Square One shows the load of CPU, HDD and RAM.
> > 
> > Square Two shows (if active) both, the sending and receiving load
> > of LAN.
> > 
> > Square Three shows (if active) both, the sending and receiving load
> > of WAN (including modem activities).
> > 
> > Alltogether, they use up just 2 cm of the toolbar, yet giving
> > instantly a detailed insight of all important system activities -
> > and problems.
> 
> If you add the system monitors to a panel, you'll discover that
> right-clicking on them allows a bit of configurability,
> including removing labels and making things smaller. Might not
> be exactly what you want, but it might be close enough.

Another thing you might want to look at for resource monitoring is
gkrellm or conky. I like gkrellm better, but YMMV.

Petter

-- 
"I'm ionized"
"Are you sure?"
"I'm positive."

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