SysAdmin. Top 6 Ubuntu 11.04 Themes to Make Natty Narwhal Look a Lot More Attractive. We have already featured a series of articles dealing with various aspects of the brand new Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal starting with the thorough review of Ubuntu 11.04.
Now its time for some extensive customization of Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal's look and feel through a bunch of cool looking themes. Following is a collection of some of my favorite GTK themes for Ubuntu 11.04/GNOME 2.0 based desktops. Take a look.Install Nautilus-Elementary Before Installing Themes This is not a surprise anymore. Most of the themes for Ubuntu we are going to feature below will require you to install Nautilus-Elementary for optimum results. Install Nautilus Elementary 2.32.2 In Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal And 10.10 Maverick Meerkat. Since Nautilus Elementary 2.32.2 has just been uploaded to the PPA for Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal and 10.10 Maverick Meerkat, I had to write a new post about installing it as well as some extra goodies.
Nautilus Elementary 2.32.2 comes with all the features the previous version had (but no new features) as well as many bug fixes. Also, the search is not using Zeitgeist anymore. Install Nautilus Elementary 2.32.2 in Ubuntu 11.04 and 10.10 Add the Nautilus Elementary PPA and install the latest 2.32.2 in Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal and 10.10 Maverick Meerkat using the following commands: sudo add-apt-repository ppa:am-monkeyd/nautilus-elementary-ppa sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get dist-upgrade "sudo apt-get dist-upgrade" is required because Nautilus Elementary has some extra dependencies: ne-terminal-config and xterm. Once installed, you must restart Nautilus using the following command: nautilus -q Extra options provided by Nautilus Elementary Tweaks ClutterFlow. How to enable mod_rewrite in apache2.2 (debian/ubuntu) Top panel in unity turned greyish-ugly. How to Enable Remote Desktop With SSH on Ubuntu. Linux and UNIX diff command help.
Quick links About diffSyntaxExamplesRelated commands Linux and Unix main page About diff Displays two files and prints the lines that are different.
Syntax diff [OPTION]... Options FILES are 'FILE1 FILE2' or 'DIR1 DIR2' or 'DIR FILE...' or 'FILE... Examples diff help dir2 Compares the directory named help with the directory named dir2. 10 tips on working fast in UNIX. 10 tips for working fast in UNIX Have you ever amazed to see someone working very fast in UNIX, firing commands and doing things in mille seconds?
Yes I have seen and I have always inspired to learn from those gems of guys. This article or tutorial or whatever you call it I have dedicated to share UNIX command practices I follow to work fast, quick or efficiently in UNIX. I work for financial services industry and my work involves development and support of online stock and futures trading application in Electronic trading, Derivatives etc. all our services runs of UNIX servers so its very important for me to work efficiently and quickly in Linux machine. This article is in continuation of my earlier article Top 10 basic networking Commands in Unix and Top 10 most useful CVS command in Unix and 10 examples of using find command in UNIX . if you have not read those you can see if you find them interesting and useful. 1) Use !
2) use !! Turn off Apache2 Autostart. How to install google gadgets in ubuntu 10.10. Lowering Gaming Mouse Sensitivity in Ubuntu 10.04/9.10. I have a Razer Deathadder.
It's a nice gaming mouse. In Ubuntu its polling rates are through the roof, though, and the mouse is pretty much unusable even with the mouse sensitivity and acceleration settings at their lowest. Here's how I regained my sanity and mouse slowness. This fix should work for any mouse (tested with many different mouse brands, including Logitech.) Fix for Ubuntu 10.04-14.04 and Fedora 12-20 That's it. To see the current settings for the device: xinput --list-props "Razer DeathAdder" To turn off mouse acceleration: xinput --set-prop "Razer DeathAdder" "Device Accel Velocity Scaling" 1 To perform the tuning automatically, I simply created a file containing the script below, ran chmod +x on it and added it to GNOME's Startup Applications -- gnome-session-properties, or System -> Preferences -> Startup Applications, or the gear in the upper-right corner -> Startup Applications in Ubuntu's Unity. #!
Please see this comment for more information about chmod. <? That's it! Fond d'écran de la mire de connexion (Page 1) / Archive.