“In this chapter from the ExtremeTech book ‘Hacking Ubuntu: Serious Hacks Mods and Customizations’ you’ll learn how to set up the operating system to your taste with things like changing the startup music, the background, fonts, icons, and colors, and navigating the Nautilus file manager – on both PCs and Macs.” The book was written for an older version of Ubuntu but it still largely applies for Feisty Fawn too.
Making Ubuntu Usable
About The Author
Eugenia Loli
Ex-programmer, ex-editor in chief at OSNews.com, now a visual artist/filmmaker.
Follow me on Twitter @EugeniaLoli
48 Comments
I see many ubuntu haters here. Why? because its got popular and rivals all distro’s in popularity?
shockingly even some ubuntu users too are hating ubuntunews.
If you read a lot of the complaints, I think you’ll find it is more just being fed up with the amount of “news”, and as at least one or two people have pointed out, it’s pretty much the same thing re-hashed.
It just gets b.o.r.i.n.g
Lord knows there has to be other things out there.
making it USABLE = changing start-up tune and background, yeah, right.. whaevva. now I got a pretty complete picture of what they are doing over there all day J, I got to work instead, that’s terrible
one word…
automatix
have a look at how useable 7.04 is
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/566101/ubuntu_7_04/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GcCtaODWUo
Edited 2007-05-08 09:29
We should not be needing a book for that. Changing a color or a font should be as easy as selecting a new color or font from the context menu of an object.
How to change your gtk2 theme on Ubuntu. Is osnews turning into digg now? Ubuntu is a fine distro and all but the amount of trivial article is getting a bit ridiculous.
What a lame article, who in the h$%% changes their wallpaper to indicate system load and calls that usability?
’nuff siad
“on both PCs and Macs”
It’s obviously not even become news yet in some quarters that PPC support (official) has been dropped with Feisty.
And ditto all the stuff about the ubu-abundance of ubuntu articles – despite my brilliant comment the other day about how we could se at least something useful in all this… (a joke, boyos).
Yeah seriously, hacking startup sounds and colors is really hardc0re uber1337 haX0rin. Amazing insider knowledge, gotta have this. O0ops got Gent00 and KDE can I still hack it *pppplllllzzzzzz* !!!111!111
Ubuntu is home of the ej33t h4ck3r!1!!!!!!!11111 But seriously I skimmed through some of this and just wondered..are any of these so called “hacks” really Ubuntu specific or did the author just toss the title Ubuntu on their to get all the fanboys on it?
Is this guy serious? He talks about usability and his first jab is about the startup sound…? If that was a problem, then the “Year of the Ubuntu Desktop” had finally arrived.
But what is really ironic – unless, of course, this guy wants to be outright cynic – is *how* he changes the startup sound. I repeat – he talks about making the thing *USABLE*. Some quotes now about changing the startup sound:
> New sound selections are not always used immediately. If you find that
> your new sounds are not immediately used, log out and log back in.
> This seems to be a bug in the Gnome Sound Preferences applet.
—
> If you want to use a different audio format, such as MP3 or OGG, you
> will need to convert it to a WAV file.
—
> As root, you will need to edit /etc/apt/sources.list […]
—
> Test the sound file using the play command. play fileOUT.wav
—
> The sox application is a great tool for converting and modifying
> sound files, but it does not support all formats for all functions. In
> particular, even though it can read MP3 files, it cannot be used to
> create MP3 files without additional libraries. To resolve this
> constraint, you can use lame package to encode MP3 files from WAV
> files.
I hope this guy won’t become part of the Ubuntu QA team.
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2007-05-08 8:27 pmLuminair
The last article posted here from the same source was shot down by the entire world, including at least one Ubuntu developer. So yeah, you can skip this one!
For the first time ever I have had a positive experience with Wine. I use Ubuntu as the main and only OS installed, but one thing I missed was the odd game or two.
Now I just run my admittedly old games in wine with no difference to running them in Windows.
(I.e click on item in menu and game loads with 2D/3D acceleration sound support. Install the game by putting the CD in and clicking the setup.exe )
Foobar2000 is the best application I have used so far to manage my music collection (Which also runs in wine).
As for the article, I have read better articles !!!
1. Install Windows
2. Install Drivers that came with PC and Software (no internet connection required)
….
Edited 2007-05-08 20:50
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2007-05-09 1:15 amrayiner
3. Install all the little software that comes standard on Linux, but not on Windows.
Windows doesn’t even come with a PDF viewer! It’s almost completely useless out of the box. In a single-CD install, Ubuntu comes with pretty much everything you’d need on your run of the mill office desktop.
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2007-05-09 1:56 amsbergman27
“””
3. Install all the little software that comes standard on Linux, but not on Windows.
“””
4. Install the antivirus and anti-adware apps that you don’t need with Ubuntu.
5. Rent the safety deposit box at the bank for the Windows install CD and activation keys; You’re desperately going to need them in the future.
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2007-05-09 1:56 am
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2007-05-09 1:57 amsbergman27
Another duplicate post. Sincerest apologies on my silly freck up. My bad. ๐
Edited 2007-05-09 01:59
It’s pretty funny.
The headline indicates Ubuntu is going to be made usable.
However the author scorns ‘usable’ as not optimal – which now seems his goal:
“The basic install of Ubuntu provides a usable system. But usable is not the same as optimal.”
The headline should have been ‘Optimizin Ubuntu’ if the credo made sense.
i always kill the startup musik on any os
I don’t.
PS. C’mon! Mod me up!
Edited 2007-05-07 23:55
never mind mod me down to -5 i don’t fck care you smegheads
Edited 2007-05-08 00:17
I do.
Do.
Do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do!
…another Ubuntu article. Yay.
Wow! Ubuntu has a long hard road ahead if after installing it you have to make it “usable.”
The linux neophytes haven’t got a chance now! ๐
Hey, if you have to make any system usable why not just install Slackware and tweak to your heart’s content? At least the system will be more secure, more stable, and it’ll do what you want it to…
Edited 2007-05-08 01:28
Every operating system requires changes to make it ‘usable’ after installation.
On windows this generally involves installing applications that actually do something useful.
I use gentoo, because I’d rather add things to make my opearating system usable than have to remove things.
“””
Wow! Ubuntu has a long hard road ahead if after installing it you have to make it “usable.”
“””
To “Garymax the Slackware Fan” and the people who modded his post up to +5:
At least bother to actually read the first sentence in the article proper:
“The basic install of Ubuntu provides a usable system. But usable is not the same as optimal.”
Edited 2007-05-09 01:08
Must we have another ubuntu article? Even I, an ubuntu user, am getting pretty damn tired of seeing that damn orange logo on osnews. Doesn’t mean I don’t like the distro, but damn.
Then imagine how feel thous who never liked ubuntu.
There is need for ‘thumbs downs’ votes in osnews too.
That would be digg you’re thinking of. I don’t think anyone wants that here!
I could also add something about Mandy and that tutorial about virtualization:
http://www.digg.com/linux_unix/A_Guide_to_Virtualization_on_Mandriv…
regards,
glyj
…and I’m getting tired of all the Ubuntu articles myself.
It is a leading Linux distro, and it is going to be pretty newsworthy in the coming months being pre-installed on some Dell systems.
What I do have to agree with is that these “articles” are anything but.
The problem isn’t Ubuntu news or reporting it, it is that so much non-news, and un-noteworthy information is passed off as interesting or worth wasting time on.
The signal to noise ratio is becoming so bad that it is making reading anything “Ubuntu” worthless.
I can’t wait for the article about the Ubuntu Dell’s great success, but until then, do we have to make every single minor action and use of the distro into an article and attempt to pass it off as anything other than the linked site’s attempt at easy ad-hits?
Q, How Many Ubuntu Articles does it take to Kill a Brain cell ?
7.04
u mean 7 brain cells it takes
Did the person who wrote that nonsense ever bother to reread it??
Serious Hacks , login music…desktop color
Uhmm, okay.
Go Ubuntu.
And you, yep you, Ubuntu “articles”, yo go too. Just tell me where you go so I can go the other way.
Hello I am a newbie here
I must say if you actually read the article, its pretty good in letting a n00b know the desktop from commandline as well as the common tweaks to the desktops. Those of the nay sayers regarding too many ooobuntu articles go away. I must say though there was one article of 7 steps to ubuntu desktop, Now that was *CRAP*, but this article has a lot of information for a noobie. So stop all your rants about ahh yet another oobuntu article.
modme up people
ps: and those who complain about the articles, why not write ones that are good eh? constructive critisism is good, and the author of that article has spent enough time to write quite a few pages on the topic. A lot of question marks about weather the topic qualifies the actual content is what getting people fired up here i think.
A suggestion to OSnews: Please implement an article level factor/indicator next to the article. Such as beginner/intermediate/prerequisites etc. So people know what linux-unix competence level is required for the article.
cheers
ahh this is a long enough rant of mine, ohh and i just registered on osnews, after a long while being an anonymous reading comments, without posting replies. now where did the anonymous commenting system go grrr….
Edited 2007-05-08 06:53
Let me complain too about the flood of ubuntu articles, since this is the new trend.
Why does no one write or submit any articles anymore about something else? …Oh wait. Everyone is busy complaining about too many ubuntu news on osnews articles they are about to ignore.
“Why does no one write or submit any articles anymore about something else? …Oh wait. Everyone is busy complaining about too many ubuntu news on osnews articles they are about to ignore. ”
I do agree that complaining doesnt help much. But as easy as it is to submit news here as hard is it to get them to show it. Unless ofcause you submit something about everyones favorite toy atm…
Mom can I eat another uburguer ?
hey…there is another in Submit News” – The Perfect Desktop – Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn.
Mom tell me this is not true!!!
I see many ubuntu haters here. Why? because its got popular and rivals all distro’s in popularity?
shockingly even some ubuntu users too are hating ubuntunews.
Is this something to do with threat brought by ubuntu on privileged user using a leet linux distro that not many win users know? if thats the reason then simply ignore all ubuntu posts on internet and stop trolling. if you think this is ubuntu’s popularity at its best, then thing again. after a year it will be ten times more.
“Posting from windows xp media center edition, almost Full time Linux user who has Opensuse 10.2 installed on dual boot but suggests Ubuntu to new linux users”
I think you’re not getting the picture either. News about Ubuntu ? Ok. This one, and many other ones are not “news”, not even close to it, just writings for newbies at most. And there are heck of a lot of them. And no, we wouldn’t have trouble if they were kept on http://www.ubuntunews.info/ and such, but they somehow keep landing here
When I have some minutes/hour to spare and take a round on the sites I usually visit and see such useless crap, well, that usually ends in me not visiting since it’s a waste of time. Now hopefully you get my picture
I love tips and tricks articles that deal with linux and or unix in general.Arguably ubuntu is what most beginning linux users seem to favor.So it’s not that awkward seeing the name ubuntu popup every now and then.
Instead of a hostile position against any article to many one should consider in my opinion it’s still a linux distribution.And if ubuntu brings more people to the wonderfull rich land of Open Source so be it.
Edited 2007-05-08 09:36
look at this – http://www.ubuntunews.info“ rel=”nofollow”>http://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report?url=