I use a very simple fvwm configuration with Ubuntu and have since 7. Make a few modifications now and then but essentially it is the same script as with 7. I still haven't found anything, and I have been to the links before you guys have posted here.
I'm still looking though Take a look at Sawfish in the software center , it's a pretty basic looking window manager. The second one looks good Look here. This might help. All rights reserved. I was happy with Windows XP and think that might go down in history as one of the greatest desktop operating systems ever. Vista was a major fail. Windows 7 has somewhat redeemed Microsoft. It has a few quirks that I can't get used to like having to reinstall my printer driver every few days.
It gets old. Rebooting for every update gets a little irritating. But, overall, Windows 7 is cool. Well, with the exception of Windows 7 Starter Edition, that is.
It's a waste of media, time and disk space. Windows 8 is a whole new animal that's really a vegetable. I hate it. I hate the look with all those ridiculously large icon things that you have to swipe through. It looks like it was designed for preschoolers not adults and certainly not for technically savvy folks like you and me.
I know it's in beta or alpha or whatever--blah, blah, blah--it's crap. I won't be using it. Oh sure, most of the goodies are still somewhere on the disk but finding them can be a real challenge. What's with the three new desktop systems I've described here?
Is the new thing to make you search endlessly for your applications and things you work with? I don't want to do that. I want to know where my programs are. I want to know where my documents are. I want to be able to work efficiently. And, searching through a bunch of flippy, gloppy icons is not my idea of efficient. How can you take something that works and then make it not work? Any of you. And, I kind of hate both of those too.
I'm reluctantly leaning in that direction. Hopefully, it's less buggy than it was a couple of years ago when I installed it the first time. Whatever I try, I'll first put it in a VM and give it a good test run. If it won't install into a VM, forget it. I won't use it either. I hope that by the time my current computer draws its last Watt that someone will have come up with something usable, efficient and not crappy.
I don't like the dumbed-down garbage that they're tossing my way. The Linux world has long offered virtually innumerable alternatives to Windows and Mac OS, including several options designed specifically to ease the transition for those making the switch. Born back in , Zorin OS may well be the best-known example. Zorin OS 9 just made its debut with a familiar, Windows 7 -like interface by default. Whereas XP is now considered a significant security vulnerability, however, Zorin OS offers all the security advantages of Linux , along with integrated firewall software to keep your system safe.
Zorin Background Plus—available to premium users—delivers even more flexibility by letting you set a video as your background.
Users can expect to receive continuous software updates all the way through to
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