Billie Walsh posted on Sat, 29 May 2010 09:18:57 -0500 as excerpted: > My better half likes to clutter up her desktop with all kinds of > "stuff". Me, I don't want to see anything but the wallpaper. I don't > want to see directories and files all over the place. If I want to see > all that junk I'll open Dolphin. Otherwise, I want it out of site. Based on what I've read as well as my own observations, the "everything in the desktop dir/folder" approach would appear to be the most common for "I don't want to have to understand computers, I just want to be able to use them as I would other tools needed to do my job" type people. > When I install and see that "Folder View" box and the other one that's > default the very first thing I do is tell them to go away and never come > back. I'd guess this to be the most common for many computer literate users, with the significant exception of the futurist gadget collectors, who prefer a multi-instrumented dashboard type approach. Our "fearless plasma leader" asegio would appear to be in the latter category, given the approach taken with plasma. I'm somewhat in between the two computer literate types, as in, I like a quite limited and very carefully selected few icons and gadgets (plasmoids, in context) on my desktop, preferably with transparent or mostly transparent backgrounds (the kde defaults are nowhere near transparent enough, but a slight shading can help with visibility in some instances), the better to enjoy my selected desktop wallpaper. On my big-desktop (dual 24 inch 1920x1200 monitors stacked for 1920x2400 overall resolution), I have an always-on-top "system status" panel covering the top third of the top (sysstatus and aux) monitor, so 1/6 of the overall space. Save for the systray plasmoid, it's filled with yasp-scripted customized system monitor plasmoids. In the bottom 2/3 of the top monitor, I have a yawp plasmoid (transparent) top-left, a large mostly transparent analog clock center, a vertically oriented narrow strip folderview plasmoid left, and a couple quick-access plasmoid icons. The bottom (main/working) monitor has the comic-strip plasmoid top left, and a very small (7% width or so, shorter than normal) auto-hide panel bottom-left. I use a slightly modified version of the professional theme off kdelook, so the panel and plasmoid backgrounds are almost, but not totally, transparent, with a slight (perhaps 5% opacity) white "frost" for uniform color readability and simple-narrow-opaque-white borders on most elements, so I can actually see where the panels and plasmoids are, and a transparent outside and nearly-transparent-center analog clock, yielding a very surrealistic "Dali-like" effect when superimposed on the wallpaper that I really enjoy. Thus, the analog clock can really be seen as a dynamic aspect of the wallpaper artwork. Otherwise, it wouldn't be there either, as I normally prefer a digital clock, and in fact have one running as part of one of my yasp-scripted plasmoids. I can afford that bit of clutter on my main desktop, because it's reasonably large. On my netbook, OTOH, I run only a very small auto-hide panel lower left, so the desktop is entirely clear. Everything else is on the dashboard, as I've taken advantage of the (AFAIK) new ability in kde 4.4 to configure it as an entirely separate activity. So on the netbook, when I invoke the dashboard, I get a full-screen sysmon activity monitor, complete with various yasp-scripted plotters (battery status included) and tail of the syslog, systray, etc. BTW, neither machine has a taskbar configured. That's unnecessary as I use desktop-grid or alt-tab app-switching, and I don't really have room for the visual clutter of a taskbar, even on the big-desktop main machine. I should really post a an updated screenshot, but here's an old one, taken when I was still running mostly kde3 (kicker, including kworldwatch and the ksysguard kicker applet on top, and the knewsticker kicker applet scrolling across the bottom, kaffeine and konqueror) with a bit of kde4 (konsole, kmail as visible in the system tray) as well. It should give you an idea of the general layout I prefer, with the one I have today being similar. (Image is 1920x2400 native, beware if you don't use an auto-image-resizing browser. Just 1.5 MB tho as it's a color-reduced-to-256-color png.) http://members.cox.net/pu61ic.1inux.dunc4n/pix/screenshots/k35-42desk.256.png -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.