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The older way of doing this, with gconftool-2 doesn’t seem to work anymore in GNOME 3, however, there is still possible to change the background image, by using the gsettings tool instead.
10 Console Music Players for Linux
CMus
This is one of the best, feature-rich players for console. Build using ncurses and thus offering a text user interface, CMus has several view modes, organizes your music by artist/album, provides playlists and a library view, a filebrowser, it allows searching, Last.fm/Libre.fm scrobbling via this script, and it uses Vi-like keyboard shortcuts.
How to Compile C/C++ In Ubuntu for Educational Purposes
This tutorial targets especially beginners in Linux and particularly Ubuntu, users who have just recently switched from Windows to Ubuntu and are facing this question: "how can I compile and run my C or C++ programs in Ubuntu?". Most of these users study C or C++ at school and are usually used from Windows with an IDE (Integrated Development Environment - a code editor which offers many other functions, including compiling and running the source code) like Dev-C++ or Code::Blocks.
Marlin File Browser for GNOME - Overview
Marlin is a relatively new file browser for GNOME somewhat similar with Nautilus when it comes to features, but with a different default interface.
6 Great Free, Open-Source Games to Fetch After Installing Ubuntu
Overview of 6 open-source games: Battle for Wesnoth, AssaultCube, Neverball, Xonotic, Hedgewars, Warzone 2100.
NeonView 0.6.0 Released With New Features
This new release, codenamed “Xiphophorus”, comes with several new features and a small bug fix.
6 Applications to Take Screenshots in Ubuntu
6 ways to take screenshots in Ubuntu: Shutter, KSnapshot, GNOME Screenshot, ImageMagick, scrot and GIMP.
IM from the Terminal: 2 Great Applications
This article is about two popular IM (Instant Messaging) clients that can be used in a terminal instead of a graphical environment. Both have advanced features and are based on the ncurses library.
Taking Screenshots With Shutter in Ubuntu
For those of you who didn’t hear about it before, it’s probably time you have a look at it. Shutter is probably the most powerful screenshot-taking application available for GNOME, including countless features and several useful tools to take screenshots and manipulate them in any way possible.
NeonView 0.2.0 Image Viewer First Version Released
This first release, codenamed ‘Betta splendens’, includes just a handful of features for now, however it is the base on which development of more advanced features will take place. Still, the goal of NeonView is to remain clean and lightweight, while also trying to implement only the needed functions that a simple image viewer should have.
Xonotic - Free Shooter Based Off Nexuiz
Xonotic is a free first-person shooter game for Linux, Windows and Mac OS X. The Xonotic project started as a fork of Nexuiz, a game which was popular for many years on Linux. The fork was created because Nexuiz was licensed to IllFonic game studios, and it is to be used as a platform for developing a commercial game for Steam, Xbox and PlayStation.
Firefox 5 Released (Ubuntu Installation Instructions)
After changing its stable release policy to a more accelerated pace, Mozilla released Firefox 5 pretty quick after the latest major Firefox version was put out. Firefox 4 was released on March 22, 2011 and this version follows only three months later. Here’s an announcement on the Mozilla Blog website.
Interview with Tom Wickline of Bordeaux Technology Group
Today we’ll be talking with Tom Wickline, leader of the Bordeaux Technology Group, a company specialized in development of Windows compatibility software, supporting Linux, FreeBSD, PC-BSD, Solaris, OpenIndiana and Mac OS X.
20 File Managers for Ubuntu
Dolphin is the default file manager in KDE and it features an easy to use interface, tabs, previews, three view modes (icons, details, columns), vertical window splitting, file and folder sorting, service menus, tags, two-mode location bar.
20 Text Editors for Linux Overview & Screenshots
First of all, I’d like to point out this article doesn’t include full-fledged IDEs, I’ll leave those for another article. So in conclusion you won’t find here Emacs, nor Vim or Eclipse and so on. This article overviews text editors, which may or may have not features belonging to a programming environment, like indentation or syntax highlighting, but aren’t full-blown development environments.
Book Overview: Ubuntu Unleashed 2011 Edition
Ubuntu Unleashed 2011 Edition: Covering 10.10 and 11.04 (6th Edition) is a book written by Matthew Helmke, Andrew Hudson and Paul Hudson. With over 700 pages, The 2011 Edition is the perfect Ubuntu manual and it covers Ubuntu 10.10 and 11.04 from A to Z, including installing, configuring, desktop applications, system administration, games, Ubuntu as a server, programming in Ubuntu.
10 More Great Tools for the Terminal
First of all I’d like to thank TuxArena’s readers for giving good feedback in the first part of this series, which overviews 15 of the tools I consider particularly useful in a console. This article overviews 10 more such tools, and most of them were suggested by you. Screenshots included.
20 Best GNOME Applications
After the overview of 20 best KDE applications, it’s time to have a look at what GNOME has to offer, right? This article overviews 20 of the GNOME applications which are, in my opinion, the best in their category. Only a single application from each category is included, and screenshots are attached. The list is put up in no particular order and at the end of the article I put noteworthy alternatives for each category (only GTK alternative applications).
Top 7 Paint Programs for Ubuntu
I didn’t include here applications like GIMP or Krita since they are full-fledged image manipulation applications, not just simple painting programs, nor Scribus or Inkscape since they serve different purposes. This article overviews 7 simple drawing applications for both KDE and GNOME.
15 Great Tools for the Terminal
htop is an interactive process viewer tool using ncurses which has the great benefit that it allows to scroll up and down the list of processes, and it also uses graphs and colors. I think all these make htop a real gem for the Linux user.
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