… I'm not asking anyone else to like or dislike it![]()
I like it, I like plainness in places (I sometimes spend weeks with plain grey desktop backgrounds) but I rarely share shots of plainness.
Here's another to make those plain shots even rarer
![Smile :) :)](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f642.png)
… I'm not asking anyone else to like or dislike it![]()
View attachment 10089
I see Spider-Man.
The good old sysutils/gkrellm2What is that monitor widget (dont know the right terminology) to the right? Is it conky?
There is a tarball with 196 skins for sysutils/gkrellm2 available for free download at muhri.net.
It's what have pictured in all my screenshots with the Glass skin, or the Invisible skin on the IBM background shots.
That's the astro/gkrellmoon2 MoonClock at the top. You can set it to monitor /var/log/pflog among a number of other things.
… 196 skins for sysutils/gkrellm2 …
I saw that you had it as a launcher, I've never done it like that.I sometimes use gkrellm more as a launcher than as a monitor. Old habit: secondary display, far right.
Copland is a nice blue skin, black, concrete, HiFiII, Operational, platinum, Plastique, Matrix_Green, and WireFrameII a few some of the nicer one as I remember it.New habit: primary display, close to the Task Manager icon for gkrellm itself, so I can pop it out then in with minimal movement of the pointer. gkrellm becomes, like, an extension of Task Manager, with the ability to manage user-specified tasks.
I only have Glass and Invisible installed on this one.
… the Glass.gkrellm.tar.gz file from the bundle. …
… needs to go in /usr/local/share/gkrellm2/themes …
Web (epiphany
) believes that I'm Russian, which is wrong, …
No different after moving all themes to that path, but thanks. I moved them all back to ~/.gkrellm2/themes
PS I don't want a transparent theme, I'm just curious about the differences in appearance.
syslog-ng is pretty nice, isn't? You can use it with ccze if you want colored output to some unused tty.You will be served by services,
How did you managed to make refind destroyed your partition table? It's just a matter of efibootmgr pointing to refind_x64.efi (pretty much the same the freebsd loader do). Also, refind doesn't need a chainloader, it doesn't need anything at all (unless you need drivers to boot BIOS-based machines that the root sits on something that EFI doesn't support, and it make sense, EFI only supports fat32), it just finds the other bootloaders and boots, you can boot refind from a pendrive if you want and it will detect all the other bootloaders (windows, freebsd, linux, netbsd, even haiku).The grub chainloader is simple. Refind once destroyed my partition table, giving me a bad taste.
I think i'll send the syslog-ng logs also to postgresql. However i need to start postgresql first. Force a change in booting order.
Probably it's the culprit, my notebook uses refind and I usually configure by hand with efibootmgr because it's simpler, efibootmgr -v in freebsd or linux can give you a pretty good example on what to do.It happened during a continu rebooting loop using alpine-linux. Probably a self-configuring alpine script when it sees its running on a zfs filesystem and thinks it is alone in the world.