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160 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
160 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 96
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Title: HPR0096: Xfce, Oh I how I love you
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0096/hpr0096.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 11:26:36
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---
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Do you have money?
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Yes!
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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This is Drupes and today I'm going to be telling you how much I love XFCE.
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This is a presentation I've given for my local Louisiana Tech Linux users group and our
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local Munro Linux users group.
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And you can download the presentation if you would like to follow along on the slides
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at tinyurl.com slash three Juliet three five Quebec golf.
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And so I'm going to pretend that you've done that and let's open up the slides.
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First we start with a toothpaste for dinner comic that's ha ha funny and I enjoy having
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a little comic while everything's getting set up.
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So while I marvel at this humorous comic, you could be downloading those slides right
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now.
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Now like a childhood memory that I have is a Star Wars book that when you had to turn
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the page, it on the little they had a little audio tape with it and it would play a R2D2 sound.
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So when you hear this sound, change the slide.
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If you hear this sound, then Greedo just got shot.
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Okay.
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Oh, how I love you XFCE.
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Let me count the ways.
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First off XFCE is simple.
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It's small and fast.
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And it's easy.
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Oh yeah.
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Okay.
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This is a screenshot of my laptop desktop.
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It makes sense.
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My laptop's desktop running XFCE, doing cool stuff.
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We're going to get more into that later.
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Now the philosophy of XFCE, it's a lightweight desktop environment designed for productivity.
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It executes fast and it can serve system resources.
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And it's modular.
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It's reusable.
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It's got full functionality of the desktop environment with all these little packages that
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they put together.
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You can pick and choose and make what's best for you.
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I don't use all of XFCE's tools because I may think something else is better than what
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comes with XFCE.
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But as Linux users, we all know we can customize things to our own liking.
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Okay, a quick history.
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Started in 97.
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It was a free Linux clone of CDE.
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I'm sure you can read this page.
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And it uses GTK2, so it's kind of dependent on Nome.
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So it was NomeGrow, so does XFCE.
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A example, this is what CDE on Solaris looked like.
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Back when XFCE was started.
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And if you look on the lower left, on the little panel down there at the bottom, or the
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lower right, you can see the little arrows pointing up.
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Like Apple just came out with that feature recently.
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I forget what it's called, but anyway, it's something old.
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This is what CDE looked like at the time, wow.
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That was awesome.
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And just for good measure, Nome, remember when you could slide the bottom panel over,
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you're like, I don't want to see the panel anymore, and it would whoosh to the left or
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whoosh to the right.
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Awesome.
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Like any good desktop environment, it's, you know, got window managers, panels, and
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desktop managers, and you can handle your printing and things like that.
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This is the settings manager.
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All your settings for XFCE are one convenient little spot, boom, right there.
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Everything is arranged very simple, but you can get more into more in depth with each
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little tool.
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And they get better and better as times go by.
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Here's window manager with a different theme and stuff you can change.
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Okay, here's the panel manager.
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We've got it down there.
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You can put the panel wherever you want.
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I actually have two panels, one running at the top, one running at the bottom.
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The fancy one down there on the bottom holds all my applications that I'm planning on
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using, or I use frequently.
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It shows, you know, the CPU and the memory and things like that, how much battery life
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I have in the time.
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This is mousepad.
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I don't particularly use it.
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I use GVib, but it's pretty much notepad.
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No syntax highlighting, no fancy stuff, and that's actually notepad running in wine.
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So I didn't stoop to the dark side to get that screenshot too badly.
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This is the XFCE4 terminal.
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It's very full featured.
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It's got tabs and you can switch between them with your keyboard and make things go
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quickly.
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I'm an HRM user, but when I really need nice cut and paste, I can use the XFCE terminal.
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Here's the settings for it, again, really, really simple, really, really easy.
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It's very in depth.
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This is Thuner.
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It's obviously a file manager.
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It's a really, really fast.
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It's also really simple.
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You can't burn CDs from it, and you know, it doesn't play the videos as thumbnails,
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but really, do you need that stuff?
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I like things fast.
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This is a fancy feature of Thuner, Thuner, Thuner, however you pronounce it, that I enjoy.
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If I'm going to be going to a directory a lot, and I want to make a little shortcut
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to it, I just drag that directory over there to the left.
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And then it's there until I get rid of it.
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So when I'm working, I can make things a lot easier for myself.
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This is XFBern.
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Obviously it's BernCDs.
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I use, oh, what's it called, it's Bersero instead of this.
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I don't know why I haven't used XFBern in a really long time, and I need to go back to
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this.
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Pretty nice.
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This is an orage, a rage.
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I don't know how to pronounce things.
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There should be some sort of website like sayoss.org or something to help us pronounce things,
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but it's your clock calendar, reminder, date keep tracking, kind of tool, Restredo.
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It's an image viewer, really quick and dirty.
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It shows images on the right, and then it, you know, the thumbnails, and then it shows
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the image very fast.
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Now again, this is my desktop.
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There's no icons, there's no right click, there's no clutter.
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If you want icons on the desktop, you could have them.
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If you want the right click to do stuff, you can make it do that.
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Awesome.
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Okay, this is my top panel.
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I've got a radio listener that I wrote.
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It's pretty slick, so I've been to listen to NPR, to show desktop button, weather update,
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volume control, task lists, shows the tasks in that particular desktop, the pages so I
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can switch between desktops, system tray, my network, or pigeon, or whatever else, XFC,
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or XChat, and then of course my logout button.
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This is the weather update.
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Pretty easy, pretty quick, you just click on it, and you have two tabs, summary or forecast.
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You have a right click on the icon to set your zip code.
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This is my radio listener.
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Really simple.
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Open up the web page to see what's going to be coming on, play, stop, and close.
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I actually wrote this in GTK dialog, so that whole little thing is just a bash script with
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some XML, actually, mostly XML.
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This is my bottom panel, the XFC menu icon at the start button in Windows, or the K button
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in KDE, launchers for my applications, we went over that kind of stuff.
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To get to the orage calendar stuff, you just click on the clock.
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So now, like I said, it's based on GTK, so the larger gnome grows, the bigger XFCE will
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be.
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There's only a handful of developers, which means it's not really good for a corporate
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environment, where you don't want to train everybody, and then these guys all the
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side, they're going to do something else, maybe, but it's really good in the fact that
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you can get in touch with these people and convince them to add in features.
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It's a very helpful and active community, easy to customize, and it's fast, fast, fast.
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Another excellent comic, if you have not downloaded the slides, you probably should.
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And of course, here's the, I didn't take this screenshot, but it's got all the transparency
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is in everything, so it's not just plain j like mine looks, you can make it kind of cool,
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and you can do the cube, if you really have to, and you can rotate your windows and change
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them all up, so it's harder to read, you know, because that makes you more productive.
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Okay, contact links, xfc.org, you can go to freedesktop.org slash wiki read all about
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it, Wikipedia article, I have a link, users group, and there's xfc-look.org to change
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things around.
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My name is Drupes, you can contact me on the hpr site or Drupes at G-Bail, and that's
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some stuff about xfce, and I love it.
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Thank you for listening to HACRIP of a Gradio, HPR is sponsored by Pharaoh.net, so head on
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to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of us in the world.
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Thank you very much for listening to H-A-R-O dot-E-T.
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