Brian Dunn wrote:
> So you guys helped me pick a distro, and i'm pretty
> happy with it. Lets here the verdicts, what window
> manager? Gnome 2.12 is what i've been using, but it
> isn't the most stable. Sometimes i can't logout and i
> have to switch to a vt and kill it. The absence of
> easily configurable menus has me sticking all my music
> apps in a "drawer," where those without icons apear as
> big feet that must be mouse-overed until i get
> tool-tipped to even know that program it is. I could
> work around/live with it but then i resized one day
> with <ctrl>+<alt>+- to read some fine print and all o'
> the sudden the horizontal refresh was busted like an
> old television. the whole screen was cycling to the
> left at a dizying pace and my muse cursor disapeared.
> Even after killing X and restarting this nonsence was
> still going on and i hate having to reboot my machine.
> So now i'm playing with e16... before i invest in
> realy figuring out how to use it, what do any of you
> using a jack studio setup with like MusE and Ardor and
> the like prefer?
>
> Thanks,
> Brian
>
>
>
Brian,
Strong preference for Fluxbox. Light, powerful, elegant, fast, highly
configurable. Pure productivity in an excellent work environment. It
has tabbed windows and the ability to open a group of programs in one
window accessed by their tabs. It has simple text files for this
(~/.fluxbox/groups) and for key bindings (~/.fluxbox/keys) and for the
menus (~/.fluxbox/menu), and a menu maker that will search for
applications as you specify.
Here's a set of clips from those files to show you how clear and simple
configuring this wm is and how in-control the user is:
Groups:
ardour_editor ardour_mixer (guess what two apps this opens in a single
window)
Keys:
Mod1 e :ExecCommand gedit
Mod1 f :ExecCommand Eterm --trans --borderless --scrollbar off
--buttonbar off --geometry 00x44+185+65 --font 10x20 --foreground-color
white -e mc >/dev/null 2>&1
Mod1 g :ExecCommand gimp
(that Eterm/mc command is very cool - along with my settings for
transparency, it results in Midnight Commander just floating disembodied
on the screen - no window, no scroll bar, no title - just its display
contents set transparently against my blue background. Then when I
shell out to a command prompt using ctrl-o all you see is the prompt
floating on the screen until something is executed, then its output
floats against the bg)
Menu:
[separator]
[submenu] (Local Menus)
[submenu] (Local-Applications)
[exec] (AbiWord) {abiword}
[exec] (Bookshelf) {/usr/share/wine-c/bookshelf}
[exec] (Celestia) {celestia }
[exec] (CmapTools) {cmaptools }
[exec] (Inkscape) {inkscape }
[exec] (GNUmeric) {gnumeric}
[exec] (Lyx) {lyx }
(which is a tiny piece of what displays when I right-click my mouse
anywhere on any screen - no Start button, no launcher, no drawers - just
a simple quick and elegant cascading menu structure where I slide down
to Local Menus, slide over to Local-Applications, and slide down to
AbiWord and I'm off and running. If I want to work within my Multimedia
sub-menu where all my self-installed music apps are I can simply tear
that off by pulling on its title and leave it open on the screen as I
launch all the programs needed for that session.).
Frank
Received on Sun Feb 26 20:15:51 2006
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