I'll Show You Mine, You Show Us Yours
Before anyone shows me something we'll both regret, let me clarify I'm strictly talking about desktop screenshots. :)
Our Desktop issue of Linux Journal is coming up, and we thought it would be fun to have a desktop contest! Is your desktop awesome? Is it super functional? Insanely spartan? Just green text on a black background? Made from the shorn fur of a thousand puppies?
As you can see in the screenshot below, my desktop isn't anything special. I have the applications I need in the task bar, and keep most of the things you see open all the time. When it comes to work, most of it ends up being done in a terminal window or word processor. (My jobs are non-stop excitement)
If I were editing a video, you'd see kdenlive running on a second virtual screen. Apart from that, what you see is what you get. I'm pretty boring.

(Click To Embiggenate)
But we know YOU aren't boring! Show us your desktop, and we'll pick our favorite. That screenshot, along with information on who owns it, will be printed in our February issue.
What makes a desktop winning material? You tell us! Why should your desktop be immortalized in the February issue of Linux Journal? Just remember, your editorial staff full of family friendly folks. Well, for the most part anyway. If my wife steps into my office and finds me sorting through desktop photos of hardcore pornography, let's just say we all lose. Me especially! (So keep it family friendly, for my kid's sake)
Oh, also HURRY! This contest is only open until Monday, November 15th. If you're the sort of person that would like to win a contest, you only have a few days to fabricate the perfect desktop. If you're honest, like my pathetic screenshot above will attest to, it should be plenty of time to take a simple screenshot.
We are looking forward to seeing your screenshots. Hopefully we get lots of entries, because if my screenshot is the only option, it will make for a sad winner's circle in our magazine. :)
Shawn Powers is an Associate Editor for Linux Journal. You might find him chatting on the IRC channel, or Twitter
Realizing the promise of Apache® Hadoop® requires the effective deployment of compute, memory, storage and networking to achieve optimal results. With its flexibility and multitude of options, it is easy to over or under provision the server infrastructure, resulting in poor performance and high TCO. Join us for an in depth, technical discussion with industry experts from leading Hadoop and server companies who will provide insights into the key considerations for designing and deploying an optimal Hadoop cluster.
Sponsored by AMD
If you already use virtualized infrastructure, you are well on your way to leveraging the power of the cloud. Virtualization offers the promise of limitless resources, but how do you manage that scalability when your DevOps team doesn’t scale? In today’s hypercompetitive markets, fast results can make a difference between leading the pack vs. obsolescence. Organizations need more benefits from cloud computing than just raw resources. They need agility, flexibility, convenience, ROI, and control.
Stackato private Platform-as-a-Service technology from ActiveState extends your private cloud infrastructure by creating a private PaaS to provide on-demand availability, flexibility, control, and ultimately, faster time-to-market for your enterprise.
Sponsored by ActiveState
| Speed Up Your Web Site with Varnish | Jun 19, 2013 |
| Non-Linux FOSS: libnotify, OS X Style | Jun 18, 2013 |
| Containers—Not Virtual Machines—Are the Future Cloud | Jun 17, 2013 |
| Lock-Free Multi-Producer Multi-Consumer Queue on Ring Buffer | Jun 12, 2013 |
| Weechat, Irssi's Little Brother | Jun 11, 2013 |
| One Tail Just Isn't Enough | Jun 07, 2013 |
- Speed Up Your Web Site with Varnish
- Containers—Not Virtual Machines—Are the Future Cloud
- Linux Systems Administrator
- Lock-Free Multi-Producer Multi-Consumer Queue on Ring Buffer
- Senior Perl Developer
- Technical Support Rep
- Non-Linux FOSS: libnotify, OS X Style
- UX Designer
- Web & UI Developer (JavaScript & j Query)
- RSS Feeds
- Reachli - Amplifying your
18 min 18 sec ago - excellent
1 hour 7 min ago - good point!
1 hour 9 min ago - Varnish works!
1 hour 19 min ago - Reply to comment | Linux Journal
1 hour 48 min ago - Reply to comment | Linux Journal
4 hours 14 min ago - Reply to comment | Linux Journal
8 hours 14 min ago - Yeah, user namespaces are
9 hours 30 min ago - Cari Uang
13 hours 2 min ago - user namespaces
15 hours 55 min ago



Comments
results
when will the results (preferable the top5 also!) will be released?
bump
Bump.... I'm also curious about this... can't wait to check out what the other LJ subscribers are up to.
unix screenshots
Lots of cool unix screenshots can be seen, and added to, over at http://www.unixporn.com (hey, don't worry, it's not porn it's unix, I promise!)
Heck, it even has its own scrot-like screenshot uploader written by a programmer named sigFLUP; free software from uberleethackerforce.deepgeek.us
check it out!
what are those icons in the
what are those icons in the notification area? I can recognize skype, dropbox, pidgin, twhirl, but not the books icon?
It's Calibre
I keep it running all the time so I can access my eBook library remotely. It's an AMAZING little cross-platform program.
The folder with a Skype icon is Skype Call Recorder.
The jar with a musical note is Pithos.
I think that covers 'em all. :)
Shawn Powers is an Associate Editor for Linux Journal. You might find him chatting on the IRC channel, or Twitter
ratposion : No tiling please
No screenshot as I make xterm look like console with black background and white text using ratpoison! And that's my default desktop!
May not sound a "cool" thing, though that's the one that best suites me.
Then why not use console itself? Well, I need full X environment and a number of regular X applications like web browser, though I spend most of the time with X terminal and use a lot of command line apps like mutt, remind etc on it.
Prefer to use every application in fully maximized form with no taskbar, resizebar etc. Some may call it a kiosk mode.
Unless a specific task demands I do not like the idea of tiling of windows on your screen. The operations like minimize, maximize, resize, pan etc. are simply an additional mental burden, IMHO. You should have the app you need right in front of you as if it's a kiosk. Ratpoison provides me that. Of course you can switch between such kiosks. This does not require tiling of them in overlapped form.
Sometimes when a task requires multiple applications visible simultaneously, you can always still have them in non overlapping frames in ratpoison.
I also set ratposion "rudeness" setting so that no popup can take focus automatically. Hate it when you are in the middle of typing and some of your keystrokes accidentally respond to a "rude" pop up that stole the focus. Even before you could read it, you end up responding to it!
Occasionally, if something badly demands a tiling window manager, I switch to WindowMaker using a ratpoison shortcut and back to ratpoison using a WindowMaker shortcut!
na
na
system memory
Shawn:
Just curious how much RAM you run with your system producing the screenshot? I am thinking it's time Santa Claus brought me a few critical system upgrade components.
RAM
My desktop is actually a decent machine (unusual for me). I have only 6GB of RAM, but it's really fast RAM that works in sets of 3. So basically I have (3) 2GB chips.
I actually wish I had a little more RAM, especially when I start running multiple VMs. But 6GB works fairly well.
Shawn Powers is an Associate Editor for Linux Journal. You might find him chatting on the IRC channel, or Twitter
uhhh...
...I'm sorry, did you just say only 6 GB of RAM? lol
%s/only/LOOK UPON MY RAM YE MIGHTY AND DESPAIR/gFull-screen no-chrome
Mine's about as boring as it gets -- running Fluxbox with no desktop icons and a black background, the slit and toolbar both auto-hide, so with no apps running, it's a black screen with a dark grey bar along the bottom. I then have my common apps running chromeless (Thunderbird, Firefox, and rdesktop are full-screen, while my xterm/rxvt terminals are 80x25 but also chromeless), so it just looks like a screen-cap of the application.
If you like that you should
If you like that you should try out xmonad!
Done!
Done!
I dont dare.
I dont dare to give my screenshot. It might contain a bittorrent client and a media player playing an illegally downloaded episode of "The Big Bang theory" ;-)
Hey, You Don't Know...
Maybe I pulled that from my TiVo machine, and renamed it the way a scene release would name it. You know, to fit in... :D
Shawn Powers is an Associate Editor for Linux Journal. You might find him chatting on the IRC channel, or Twitter