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Hide Activities Button does exactly what you would expect. It hides the activities button found a the leftmost corner of the top panel. This button traditionally actives the activities overview in GNOME, but plenty of people use the Super Key on the keyboard to do this same function. Though this disables the button itself, it does not disable the hot corner. Since Ubuntu For other distributions, there are a plethora of other ways to disable the hot corner if you so desire, which we will not cover in this particular article.

Hide Activities Button. OpenWeather adds an extension to the panel that gives the user weather information at a glance. OpenWeather gives the user the choice between OpenWeatherMap and Dark Sky to provide the weather information that is to be displayed. This is the extension I mentioned earlier which allows the user to customize the location in which their desktop notifications appear on the screen.

Not only does this allow the user to move their notifications over to the right, but Panel OSD gives the user the option to put their notifications literally anywhere they want on the screen. But for us migrating from Unity to GNOME, switching the notifications from the top middle to the top right may make us feel more at home. Panel OSD. Places Status Indicator has been a recommended extension for as long as people have started recommending extensions.

Places adds a drop-down menu to the panel that gives the user quick access to various areas of the file system, from the home directory to serves your computer has access to and anywhere in between.

The convenience and usefulness of this extension become more apparent as you use it, becoming a fundamental way you navigate your system. Places Status Indicator. Instead, it makes the user wait while the system automatically refreshes the list. Refresh Wifi Connections fixes this. It simply adds that desired refresh button to the dialog box, adding functionality that really should be included out of the box.

Refresh Wifi Connections. The Remove Dropdown Arrows extension removes the arrows on the panel that signify when an icon has a drop-down menu that you can interact with. To turn it back off I have to disable Remove Dropdown Arrows and then enable it again until once more it randomly reappears out of nowhere. Remove Dropdown Arrows. Status Area Horizontal Spacing allows the user to control the amount of space between the icons in the status bar.

If you think your status icons are too close or too spaced out, then this extension has you covered. Status Area Horizontal Spacing. By default, when you open an application in GNOME is will sometimes stay behind what you have open if a different application has focus.

GNOME then notifies you that the application you selected has opened and it is up to you to switch over to it. There are certain applications that seem to jump to the front when opened while the rest rely on you to see the notifications to know they opened. Steal My Focus changes that by removing the notification and immediately giving the user focus of the application they just opened. Because of this inconsistency, it was difficult for me to get a screenshot so you just have to trust me on this one.

Steal My Focus. It allows me to be more productive and aware of my virtual desktop, making for a much better user experience. Workspaces to Dock allows the user to customize their overview workspaces by turning into an interactive dock. You can customize its look, size, functionality, and even position.

The B00merang Project did an amazing effort that probably costed them hundreds of hours of work, and they gave it for free! If you want, you can show them your gratitude by contacting them and saying a thank you, or via supporting them on their GitHub profile. In addition to that, you would be glad to know that they provide more themes than this; Such as Windows 95, 8, macOS, Solaris, android themes and much more too! You can browse their themes from the following link , and you can get their icon themes from the following page.

Interested in Linux and open source software? Come test your experience by taking a quiz , or you can start by solving the one below:. You may share your results with your friends afterwords about the quiz you just took or challenge them to score better than you!

We can publish more of these nice quizzes if more people join the cause. You have finished your quiz. Skip to content. Nostalgia is a weird feeling. Table of Contents. A way to build, install, query, verify, update, and uninstall packages. A way to only install and uninstall packages. A way to install only closed-source packages.

A way to only secure software. Relay Package Manager. R Package Manager. RPM Package Manager. Am running Wheezy, so cannot speak of the offering in Squeeze. Configuration options in KDE are good and easy to get to, though some command line tweaking still needs to be done sometimes. I used to use Wicd. But recently, I decided because I could to do a complete reinstall of my system. Didn't need it, I just felt like doing it.

It also meant that I was starting afresh with a clean system. Since, I have used Network Manager and am quite happy with it. Well, at least, now that am used to it. With greetings Romane. If you press Ctrl-L in Nautilus the button location bar turns into a text field that you can easily copy and paste. Did you know of shell extensions? There is even a gnome-shell-extensions package with a bunch of them, and gnome-tweak-tool can activate them with one click.

It doesn't force anything on you more than it has before. I wonder if gares has actually tried extensions Have you taken refuge in xfce lands or something similar? It should be OK as it comes from Debian. NM is really cool! Gnome shell and unity are hideous, u said it well. I will postpone my upgrade a bit to see where it's going. I got fed up with this. Now I use OpenBox with fbpanel, and a couple extra programs.

Its really fast, no gpu acceleration and it just works really really fast. Indexing was awful in the gnome 3 launcher. Gnome 2 will be missed. The icons on the panel are a real pain to set up but can be set. Not intuitive for sure.

Also placing icons is a pain as I cannot put them anywhere but works. As of right now, it sorta jumbled altogether. They had a perfectly usable desktop, they stabilised it enough to get to the point where nice things such as nautilus-actions were the next logical step to have smart context menus that scripts stuff is such a hack with it's total lack of filters based on mime types or extension , but they decided to change everything while giving no thought to what might be breaking.

I never used screenies, I understand they are similar to gdesklets which, btw, are such a piece of crap, they never worked properly on any of the machines I tried. Post a Comment. Update: I managed to make sound work. For some weird reason, a mute switch option of some the many and who knows how useful switches of my sound card was enabled.



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