Difference between revisions of "GNOME"

From Organic Design wiki
(Extensions: Window Overlay Icons - adds icons to the window list)
(Extensions: Steal My Focus - removes the 'Window is ready' notification and focus window immediately instead)
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*[https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5/alternative-status-menu/ Alternative Status Menu] ''- puts power-off/restart back into the menu''
 
*[https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5/alternative-status-menu/ Alternative Status Menu] ''- puts power-off/restart back into the menu''
 
*[https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/302/windowoverlay-icons/ Window Overlay Icons] ''- adds icons to the window list''
 
*[https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/302/windowoverlay-icons/ Window Overlay Icons] ''- adds icons to the window list''
 +
*[https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/234/steal-my-focus/ Steal My Focus] ''- removes the 'Window is ready' notification and focus window immediately instead''
  
 
=== Weather/Timezone fail ===
 
=== Weather/Timezone fail ===

Revision as of 18:49, 23 May 2012

GNOME offers an easy to understand desktop environment for your GNU/Linux or UNIX computer.

GNOME 3

GNOME3 Screenshot.png

Extensions

The GNOME Shell extension design is designed to give a high degree of power to the parts of the GNOME interface managed by the shell, such as window management and application launching. It simply loads arbitrary JavaScript and CSS. This gives developers a way to make many kinds of changes and share those changes with others, without having to patch the original source code and recompile it, and somehow distribute the patched code.

Extensions are listed at extensions.gnome.org and can be installed one-click style directly from the site :-) some extensions that I recommend are:

Weather/Timezone fail

One big failure I've found is the clock doesn't show weather any more and no longer allows multiple time zones. I've found some instructions here for installing some alpha stuff that puts it back, but it hasn't worked for me and I don't think it supports multiple time zones. They talk as if this is an amazingly complex problem and would be an awesome new feature, but it's been working beautifully in GNOME 2.x for years! why not just have it back the way it was?!

See also