The basic idea is like tiling window manager with a fixed identical grid system.
I don't want windows piled up in a same desktop(workspace).
We can have a huge virtual desktop like setting up 4x4(=16) workspaces, and place a new window in each workspace every time when the window launchs.
Using Unity-Expo, it behaves like zoomed tiled windows/desktop.
If there is a vacant workspace, newly launc
When I log-in on ubuntu 12.04, the workspace switcher often seems to "remember" the last used workspace when shutting down - and it switches to that one when I start up.
I'm a Windows guy who recently switched to Ubuntu ... I use gVim for programming.
I'm wondering if if is possible to easily change the way that the workspace switcher works.
For example if I open Firefox(or any other program), move it to a second workspace then click on the Firefox button again, Ubuntu automatically moves me to the second workspace and brings Firefox to the front.
A new version of Quest Workspace Desktop Authority further simplifies management of users' Windows environments.
{loadposition stephen08}Quest Workspace Desktop Authority allows IT administrators to provide a consistent user environment across physical and virtual Windows desktops and at the same time enforce security policies.
Quest Workspace Desktop Authority 9 features a new web console which
I've got Chrome open in the top-left workspace and two terminals open in the top-right workspace. The two terminals are snapped to left-half-screen and right-half-screen. When I alt-tab back to Chrome, the righthand terminal automagically show up on the left-half-screen of the top-left workspace?
Can anybody explain why my window is teleporting to places where it doesn't belong?
After a sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade and putting the command
sudo apt-get install kubuntu-desktop
in the terminal to install KDE I get this:
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
kubuntu-desktop: Depends: kde-workspace but not to be installed
Depends: okular but it will not install
Depends: plasma-desktop but it will not install
Depends: plasma-netbook but not
KDE is beautiful, even if you never change a thing on your desktop. What makes it even more appealing is all of the customizable visual features. Three areas you should consider spicing up a little are your KDE style/theme, your Plasma Workspace theme, and your icons. The following are just a few of the most popular in each category on KDE-Look.org.
Hi
Every now and again the plasma workspace ramdomly crashes and then recovers itself here is the debug after i installed gdb
BTr3-KDE-64bit