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  • big_teee
    replied
    I also use the XFCE desktop because it is so customizable.
    I use the Xfpanel-switch a lot.
    Once I get the desktop like I want it, I save it to a folder, with the xfpanel-switch. It allows you to rebuild the panel with a file download.
    Then when I load another distro, I always download the XFCE desktop if it doesn't come standard, and rebuild the panel, with xfpanel-switch.
    I put my panel on the bottom, and install a small autohide side panel with most of the app icons on it.
    When not in use It hides to the left.
    I've tried a little of everything, and like this setup the best.
    Especially good for small laptop screens, where space is of importance!
    See SS.

    T
    Attached Files
    Last edited by big_teee; 10-03-2017, 07:22 PM.

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  • Gnobuddy
    replied
    Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
    What I liked about the XP file manager was...
    The nice thing about Linux is there is a lot of choice - there are plenty of different file managers to try out. Unlike Windows, you are not locked into whatever file manager came with the install CD.

    Hopefully you will find a Linux file manager you like, but of course, I can't guarantee that you will.

    My my own all-time favourite file manager was Konqueror on the 3.x versions of the KDE desktop. One of the things I liked about it was that it was good at letting you click on icons to select files, but it was also good at letting you type filenames - and entire directory trees - into it. So if you had two hundred music files in the folder /home/myname/music, you wouldn't be forced to stare at two hundred icons, trying to locate "Crowded_House_The_Very_Best_Of". Instead, you could type into the top of the Konqueror window "/home/myname/music/Crowd", and it would not only auto-complete the filename (show you a list of possibilities), but also take you straight to the folder you wanted once you selected the proper name and hit enter. No need to use the mouse at all, unless you wanted to.

    This is exactly the kind of thing Apple - and typical Apple customers - don't want to see. If you're very right-brained, sorting through three hundred pretty translucent file folder icons may be more appealing than having to understand the logic behind a directory tree (like /home/myname/music/Crowded_House_The_Very_Best_Of). But if you're a little more left-brain oriented, like most of us on this forum, the concept of a directory tree - and the ability to type it in - can be a huge advantage in many cases.

    Sadly, KDE went to hell in a handbasket when version 4 came along, taking Konqueror with it. After trying subsequent KDE versions intermittently for the next few years, only to find it continued to be slow and buggy, I finally gave up and moved on (to XFCE). XFCE comes with it's own file manager (Thunar), which I don't like as much, but such is life. The things you like best don't always stick around for the duration.

    Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
    Another thing I liked about XP and Win2K was the file search module.
    Xubuntu comes with a lightweight file-search utility called Catfish. It's pretty fast. I don't use file search a lot (prefer to organize my files myself, and remember them that way). But my wife uses catfish, and, for the most part, likes it.

    Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
    I imagine that you could do all or most of that from the command line in Linux but it would be really nice if someone wrote a program to do that with a GUI interface. If there is already a program that does that I will be switching to Linux immediately. Swear to Buddha!
    Why not put Linux on a USB3 thumb drive and boot from it, give Catfish a try, see if you like it. If you don't, no fuss, no muss, go back to your current operating system!

    The Buddha was far too enlightened to care about such trivialities as anyone's operating system of choice. Baby Jesus is less sanguine, and he cries every time he finds someone using Windows.

    By the way: XFCE usually comes with the "start bar" at the top of the window. I have to use Windows five days a week at work, and it has the start bar at the bottom. This is like driving a car with the gas pedal on the left on weekdays, and a car with the gas pedal on the right on weekends - very annoying, and a huge waste of time, because all your automatic "muscle memory" responses will be wrong on one operating system.

    Fortunately, it's very easy to move the XFCE task bar to the bottom of the screen - it only takes a couple of mouse clicks. It's one of the first things I do every time I install Xubuntu. Life's too short to waste it hunting for the task bar!

    Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
    P.S. Does Linux use right-click menus as extensively as Windows?
    Yes. And on Linux, middle click also has uses (every mouse I've seen in the last decade lets you click the scroll-wheel as the centre button). For example, you can select text in the usual way with the mouse, and then paste the selected text somewhere else by clicking the middle mouse button. Very quick and handy.

    Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
    P.P.S. Do any of the Linux variations offer good support for a touch screen?
    No experience with this, so I can't answer you. Hopefully someone else will.

    -Gnobuddy

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve A.
    replied
    Originally posted by Gnobuddy View Post
    I should mention that I don't play video games - I find the real world much more complex and interesting. So I can't report frame rates while bloodily slaughtering thousands of virtual creatures.
    Me, neither — at least for the past 15 years or so. In the late 80's I really enjoyed games like Wolfenstein and a scary one called something like The Seventh Guest where you were walking around a haunted mansion.
    The 90's brought Doom and Quake along with Warcraft 2, Starcraft and Diablo. I hooked up a second computer and created a network to play these games with my son as multi-player, always cooperative, since he was a much better gamer than me, having started using computers in 1988 when he was 3 (his choice, not mine.)
    The original Diablo had a cheat for duping gold, etc. — if you cast it down on the ground just right it would be duplicated. I think that we spent more time duping gold than actually fighting the monsters underground... well, you wanted to be able to buy the best shit!
    My son is 32 and gaming is still a big part of his life, just like music is a big part of mine.

    Steve A.

    Leave a comment:


  • big_teee
    replied
    I don't think You're ever going to leave windows, I'll believe it when I see it!
    But, it's fine either way.
    I used XP and win 7 for years, but have no desire to go back.
    Just updating the AV dat files, and trying to find decent free anti-malware was a pain.
    Here's a pic of Thunar the FM that comes with XFCE desktops.
    It does everything I need.
    Also a pic of Midnight commander.\
    You can do all kinds of file manipulation with it.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve A.
    replied
    Originally posted by big_teee View Post
    I downloaded Ubuntu-Kylin, which is a chinese version of Ubuntu linux.
    It starts off live in chinese, but if you install it to the hard drive, you can pick the english language installer, which I did.
    Here are a few pics of it, I like the XP win look, with the panel.
    It is as easy to use as the old win98 or winXP.
    They are using a modified Ubuntu Mate Desktop, for the platform.
    I have it loaded on my HP linux test computer.
    T
    What I liked about the XP file manager was that it was more text-based than Windows 7 which seems to be much more pixel-based. For example when you right-click in the file list pane the results depend on exactly where in the listing that you click, like whether it is white space or not. With XP it seemed like the file manager treated the listings more like cells in a spreadsheet where it did not matter where in the cell you clicked.

    Another thing I liked about XP and Win2K was the file search module. Vista and higher started searching for text inside files and creating huge indexes whereas XP/W2K evidently searched the FAT tables first which was very fast.

    As a workaround with Windows 7 I've been using an app called Everything which creates an index from the FAT tables of your drives each time it loads and after that the filename searches are lightning fast. I also use FileSearchEX which can optionally search for text within files, on any drive or folder that you specify. You can also search just for certain types of files, in several preset or user-designed categories.

    I imagine that you could do all or most of that from the command line in Linux but it would be really nice if someone wrote a program to do that with a GUI interface. If there is already a program that does that I will be switching to Linux immediately. Swear to Buddha!



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    Steve A.

    P.S. Does Linux use right-click menus as extensively as Windows? IMO that was one of the most important features that MS added to their graphical interface in the past 20 years, something that the Mac never had with their single button mouse, at least until 2005. (That has been one of my biggest gripes about Adobe, their Windows apps — at least the older ones I've used — had a very limited palette of right click options since the Mac mice only had one button for over 20 years.)

    P.P.S. Do any of the Linux variations offer good support for a touch screen? I picked up a Lenovo laptap with a touch screen running Windows 8.1 a few years ago, and missed the free upgrade to Window 10 by 2 days!

    Leave a comment:


  • Gnobuddy
    replied
    Originally posted by rjb View Post
    EDIT:
    Broader question: Has anyone tried any Linux distro on a system with Solid State Drive?
    Does it fly or what?
    Yes, and yes!

    I have a refurbished, off-lease Core i5 (probably at least 6 years old) that I bought from Staples a year or so ago. It's only got 4 GB of RAM, but the "hard drive" is a Samsung 256 GB SSD. I installed Xubuntu 16.04 (a stable version of Xubuntu that is supported for several years with security updates). It boots in seconds, and every application I use is extremely responsive - there really are no noticeable lags anywhere, except occasional ones when waiting for something to download from the Internet.

    My wife has a 2013 or 2014 Core i3 that I assembled myself from parts bought from NewEgg. It has 8 GB of RAM, and whatever 256 GB SSD was on sale when I bought the parts for it. It's also running Xubuntu 16.04, and it boots even faster than my (older) Core i5. Once again, every application is extremely responsive, and the only thing that's slow enough to ever notice a lag is the Internet - which has nothing to do with Linux or the PC hardware, and everything to do with our Internet provider, and the state of British Columbia's network infrastructure (it's reeling under the insanely rapid population growth we're experiencing.)

    I should mention that I don't play video games - I find the real world much more complex and interesting. So I can't report frame rates while bloodily slaughtering thousands of virtual creatures.

    -Gnobuddy

    Leave a comment:


  • big_teee
    replied
    With Linux, you can forget all about defrag, all the poweroff scanning issues, and no blue screens, that I'm aware of.
    Linux has a app on the panel, called places.
    From the panel, you pick what drive you want to open, and it cuts down on the file manager use.
    Linux has a program call mc, or midnight commander that is good for file managetment.
    It takes a little while to get out of the mindset of comparing linux programs to windows programs and tasks.
    Most of the window tasks I used to do, I don't even think of anymore.
    Most tasks are faster with linux.
    I am impatient at times, and anytime you want a linux computer off, you can hold the power button down and it will turn off.
    When it boots back up , it doesn't care how you powered it down, it just boots and works.
    If you give a windows computer a hard power down, it goes ape the next time you reboot.
    Do it two or three times in a row on a window machine, and it may not reboot at all.
    Those are major differences in MS, and Linux.
    Each linux desktop has it's own file manager, but they are all semi similar.
    I can get by with most any of them.
    T
    Last edited by big_teee; 10-02-2017, 10:18 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve A.
    replied
    Originally posted by big_teee View Post
    I downloaded Ubuntu-Kylin, which is a chinese version of Ubuntu linux.
    It starts off live in chinese, but if you install it to the hard drive, you can pick the english language installer, which I did.
    Here are a few pics of it, I like the XP win look, with the panel.
    It is as easy to use as the old win98 or winXP.
    They are using a modified Ubuntu Mate Desktop, for the platform.
    I have it loaded on my HP linux test computer.
    T
    What I liked about the XP file manager was that it was more text-based than Windows 7 which seems to be much more pixel-based. For example when you right-click in the file list pane the results depend on exactly where in the listing that you click, like whether it is white space or not. With XP it seemed like the file manager treated the listings more like cells in a spreadsheet where it did not matter where in the cell you clicked.

    Another thing I liked about XP and Win2K was the file search module. Vista and higher started searching for text inside files and creating huge indexes whereas XP/W2K evidently searched the FAT tables first which was very fast.

    As a workaround with Windows 7 I've been using an app called Everything which creates an index from the FAT tables of your drives each time it loads and after that the filename searches are lightning fast. I also use FileSearchEX which can optionally search for text within files, on any drive or folder that you specify. You can also search just for certain types of files, in several preset or user-designed categories.

    I imagine that you could do all or most of that from the command line in Linux but it would be really nice if someone wrote a program to do that with a GUI interface. If there is already a program that does that I will be switching to Linux immediately. Swear to Buddha!



    Click image for larger version

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    Steve A.

    P.S. Does Linux use right-click menus as extensively as Windows? IMO that was one of the most important features that MS added to their graphical interface in the past 20 years, something that the Mac never had with their single button mouse, at least until 2005. (That has been one of my biggest gripes about Adobe, their Windows apps — at least the older ones I've used — had a very limited palette of right click options since the Mac mice only had one button for over 20 years.)

    P.P.S. Do any of the Linux variations offer good support for a touch screen? I picked up a Lenovo laptap with a touch screen running Windows 8.1 a few years ago, and missed the free upgrade to Window 10 by 2 days! Damn...
    Last edited by Steve A.; 10-03-2017, 02:45 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve A.
    replied
    Originally posted by big_teee View Post
    My friend Allen in CA, runs a SSD, in a desktop.
    He loves it.
    I run laptops with conventional 2.5 inch SATA drives.
    I make up for speed, by running additional RAM.
    I have no issues with speed.
    Most speed issues here in my area are ISP web speed issues, not computer hardware issues.
    T
    When I booted up my NOS 2009 Fujitsu laptop this morning you could certainly hear and feel the hard drive. I have an SSD drive around here somewhere (bought for another project) and was thinking of putting it in to get more battery life.
    As for RAM I've had compatibility problems in the past. Is there a good primer on modern RAM out there?

    Steve A.

    Leave a comment:


  • big_teee
    replied
    I downloaded Ubuntu-Kylin, which is a chinese version of Ubuntu linux.
    It starts off live in chinese, but if you install it to the hard drive, you can pick the english language installer, which I did.
    Here are a few pics of it, I like the XP win look, with the bottom panel.
    It is as easy to use as the old win98 or winXP.
    They are using a modified Ubuntu Mate Desktop, for the platform.
    I have it loaded on my HP linux test computer.
    T
    **If you run it live, you may want to brush up on your mandarin? :<)
    Attached Files
    Last edited by big_teee; 10-02-2017, 05:31 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • big_teee
    replied
    My friend Allen in CA, runs a SSD, in a desktop.
    He loves it.
    I run laptops with conventional 2.5 inch SATA drives.
    I make up for speed, by running additional RAM.
    I have no issues with speed.
    Most speed issues here in my area are ISP web speed issues, not computer hardware issues.
    T

    Leave a comment:


  • rjb
    replied
    So, back to my original question, has anyone tried GalliumOS on a Chromebook?
    No? Oh well. OK then.

    -rb

    EDIT:
    Broader question: Has anyone tried any Linux distro on a system with Solid State Drive?
    Does it fly or what?

    Leave a comment:


  • big_teee
    replied
    As per Steve A suggestions.
    To run linux live, you will need a usb writing app.
    USB writer works fine and is small.
    https://sourceforge.net/projects/usbwriter/
    It is small and has an icon that sits on your windows desktop.
    Next you will need a Linux .iso image file.
    I suggest starting with a Linux Mint or a Ubuntu distro.
    Most of the Mint distros have the panel on the bottom.
    Most of the Ubuntu distros have the panel on the top.
    On some Distros, the panel can be moved to the top or bottom.
    Here are a few links.
    https://linuxmint.com/download.php
    I would go with mint XFCE, or Mate, for a first load.
    For Ubuntu:
    Development Release: Ubuntu 17.10 Beta 2 (DistroWatch.com News)
    A very nice Ubuntu with top panel(can be easily moved to the bottom), and lots of music recording Studio software is Ubuntu Studio.
    Ubuntu Mate, & Ubuntu, are both easy to learn with top panel.
    Save the file to a folder location, where you can find it, or save it to the desktop.
    Next you need to burn the down loaded image .iso to the usb with the usb writer.
    Then you boot your computer with the usb drive.
    You will have to go into your bios, and change the boot order to boot from usb first.
    When your computer boots, select try linux in live mode.
    Please report back here your results.
    It is actually pretty easy.
    If you don't like one linux, download and try another.
    The great thing about it, it's all FREE!
    GL,
    T
    Last edited by big_teee; 10-02-2017, 01:45 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve A.
    replied
    Originally posted by big_teee View Post
    As far as Enzo's question that he asks, he will only get the answer when he tries it.
    Damn — wasn't that what Nancy Pelosi said about Obamacare back in 2009 that got her in trouble ?

    For the benefit of Enzo and the rest of us why not post some links for us to download a few tried and true distros that we can load onto a USB drive or burn to a CD/DVD... this is to run it from the external media, not install it, at least at first.

    BTW I have a laptop I have hardly ever used from 2009 with Vista. I've listed all of the details below. I was thinking of putting in a new hard drive (which I already have) and installing a distro that you would recommend for someone who loved XP and Windows 2000, hated Vista and have put up with Windows 7 Home Edition Premium for way too long! Besides the basic browser and email client I want a file manager like the one in XP for moving files around and renaming them, etc. (that is my biggest complaint about Windows 7! )

    The Fujitsu has a short battery so I'll probably keep it plugged in on my dining room tablet and connect to the internet via wifi. BTW does Linux require you to set a default browser (like Windows does) or can you "play the field" as you can with Android (I use several browsers because some sites do not work well with certain browsers on my circa 2014 tablet.)

    Fujitsu Lifebook A6110
    A6110, T5250, 15CECVWXGA, VHP, DVD, 1G, 160G, AWLN

    https://www.notebookcheck.net/Fujits...10.7240.0.html

    Fujitsu America - Support - LIFEBOOK A6110 Notebook PC

    Steve A.

    Leave a comment:


  • nickb
    replied
    Originally posted by Gnobuddy View Post
    ,,,,The fascinating thing is that Steve Jobs mastered the art of ripping off his customers, while simultaneously having most of them worship and love him for ripping them off, because he managed to convince them that they were simultaneously superior to everyone else, and martyrs to the holy cause. You may have heard joking references to Steve Jobs "reality distortion field" - it is the same thing that other charismatic psychopaths throughout history have had, from Adolf Hitler to Donald Trump to the various fundamentalist televangelists and religious cult leaders.

    -Gnobuddy
    I thought I was the only one who despised Apple. I feel quite relieved.

    Leave a comment:

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