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Friday, April 8th 2005, 4:47pm

Author: Ilici

less screensavers for regular users

You'll need the "kscreensaver-xsavers" package. I have the endgame screensaver on my normal user after installing that package.

Monday, April 4th 2005, 10:30am

Author: Ilici

RE: Look and feel inconsistancies

Ok, that sounds right. Good idea. Is there a way to copy all my kde settings to the root account? I've logged in as root in KDE and set up the fonts and such, and now Guard Dog looks fine. Thanks for the info.

Sunday, April 3rd 2005, 9:10pm

Author: Ilici

RE: Look and feel inconsistancies

Quoted Originally posted by jacek Quoted Originally posted by Ilici Also GuardDog (not sure which toolkit it's based on) also shows the same problem. [...] In GuardDog i've seen that though i've changed my icon theme it still uses the old icons, so i'm inclined to think it isn't responding to my theme change. GuardDog uses KDE libraries, but it seems that it uses custom icons that aren't affected by themes. It seems also to use custom widget themes i guess. Any way to change that?

Sunday, April 3rd 2005, 4:31pm

Author: Ilici

RE: Look and feel inconsistancies

I think it is, but other GTK+ software does nto have the problem. Also GuardDog (not sure which toolkit it's based on) also shows the same problem. I have the GTK-QT theme engine installed and my GTK+ programs look fine. In GuardDog i've seen that though i've changed my icon theme it still uses the old icons, so i'm inclined to think it isn't responding to my theme change.

Sunday, April 3rd 2005, 12:25pm

Author: Ilici

Look and feel inconsistancies

Hello, I'm having a problem with the look of KDE when using Synaptic (and some other software like GuardDog). Here's a screenshot Any idea how to solve those? So far KDE has been all great these are the only quirks i have left.

Tuesday, March 29th 2005, 11:08am

Author: Ilici

Upgrade??

What distibution are you using? RedHat based distros have Yum and Autoupdate and Debian based have apt. If you have a debian based distro all you have to do is open a shell and << su -c "apt-get upgrade" >>

Monday, March 28th 2005, 4:46pm

Author: Ilici

Window borders when application is maximized

Hello! I'm new to the KDE scene after migrating from Gnome and I must say i'm very impressed with the way everything works and feels. After lots of tweaking and configuring, I couldn't find one option for window borders: How can I hide the window borders when the application is maximized so i can't resize it. I think that without borders it looks much better when maximized as it gives more room for the window contents itself.