You are not logged in.
I am pretty sure it's available somewhere on the weather conky topic, but there is no way for me to easily find the source post or remember to what extend I've edited it, so I'll just upload the whole thing (together with both fonts with symbols): Google drive URL.
Thank you, appreciate the upload.
Unfortunately I just cannot bring myself to use that company's services anymore. I'm afraid I have to wait till I came across that conky somewhere on the forum. Looks great anyhow.
Offline
Sun For Miles wrote:I am pretty sure it's available somewhere on the weather conky topic, but there is no way for me to easily find the source post or remember to what extend I've edited it, so I'll just upload the whole thing (together with both fonts with symbols): Google drive URL.
Thank you, appreciate the upload.
Unfortunately I just cannot bring myself to use that company's services anymore. I'm afraid I have to wait till I came across that conky somewhere on the forum. Looks great anyhow.
I archived them for myself, thanks Sun For Miles -
back on topic -
Last edited by PackRat (2018-03-08 20:18:33)
You must unlearn what you have learned.
-- yoda
Offline
Offline
@PackRat Great, thank you!
Offline
@Sun For Miles That's one of the best weather conkys I've ever seen! Really cool. Is that script maybe available somewhere on the forum? I always preferd darker themes, they tend to be more convenient for the eyes.
I believe it's from here. Glad you like it.
Last edited by TeoBigusGeekus (2018-03-09 23:12:21)
Please make Autocad Civil 3D and Archicad work on Linux!
Please make Autocad Civil 3D and Archicad work on Linux!
Please make Autocad Civil 3D and Archicad work on Linux!
Please make Autocad Civil 3D and Archicad work on Linux!
Offline
Offline
Very good brontosaurusrex, Old systems works just fine on a stable Debian, my main system is a dual core from 2007 and i am always happy with the results and tweaks.
To run Linux with 4GB RAM is easy, but to use 300MB with Browser, Video Player, Music Player, Text editor, torrents, command, line simultaneously it is not so easy to keep it simple
So, good job maint alive an old horse.
What I notice on your sysinfo about sys temp 75°, are you running any video player on the background or you're squeezing it with anything else? because 75 degree is not a normal temp even for a 2008 system. Mine is running idle 25° degree Winter | 50/55° Summer.
Configs looks exactly the same as those you usually post. So, very good scrot!
Last edited by Nili (2018-03-11 11:44:18)
Tumbleweed | KDE Plasma
Offline
It's overheating even at boot stage for some reason (kernel downclocking the cpu). Might be a 'laptop stuck in dusty garage' kind of thing.
Offline
Then if it gets hot on idle or since the start, is something serious to double-check, I read somewhere that there is no problem even on 100° I have no experienced myself but I would not prefer to work with a system that overheats so much, at least for everyday things.
Indeed a dusk dust or other system/kernel tasks may overheat it, maybe try some other minimal systems?
Alpine, AntiX, Devuan/Debian (netinst) at least to see the state of the temperature.
On Debian also on other distros, for those old system types , (architecture i686) it is recommended. Non pae-kernel aswell but even with pae (3.16.0-4-686-pae) it is just fine. There is also ReduceDebian worth to check it.
Regards!
Last edited by Nili (2018-03-11 12:15:57)
Tumbleweed | KDE Plasma
Offline
inxi seems to be showing about 5 degrees more than sensors for some reason, what I have tryed so far:
- newer kernel from backports
- GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="acpi.power_nocheck=1"
- GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="acpi_OS=Linux" < idling below 60 degrees
Core 0: +58.0°C (high = +85.0°C, crit = +85.0°C)
Core 1: +58.0°C (high = +85.0°C, crit = +85.0°C)
maybe try some other minimal systems?
Nah, its this or trashbin.
p.s. Or maybe a quick dwm
Last edited by brontosaurusrex (2018-03-11 16:01:04)
Offline
Does someone maybe know what it is on the upper left corner showing (00,01,11, etc.) on this: https://scrot.moe/image/6QqVC screenshot? Is that an urxvt feature?
Offline
Does someone maybe know what it is on the upper left corner showing (00,01,11, etc.)
That's just me trying to be clever, they are the numbers assigned to my desktop tags in the dwm window manager — they are the first four numbers in the base-2 system (also known as "binary").
And I wasn't going to post that scrot because my URxvt font is clearly missing the braille glyphs that gtop uses to display the "graphical" indicators :8
It's a silly application anyway: Node.js to view a pretty display in the terminal? Oh dear...
Offline
@HoaS I think that screenshot still looks great! Are these also "buttons" to change the desktop or is that via shortcut (or both)? Did not use dwm before, but it looks interesting.
I wonder: Is this similar - or the same, just different configuration? Can someone maybe identify any tool showed on the screenshot?
Btw this is a screenshot from The Fifth Estate.
Last edited by martix (2018-03-13 16:55:01)
Offline
Are these also "buttons" to change the desktop or is that via shortcut (or both)?
Both, the entire panel area is clickable and different commands can be executed depending on the area and mouse button used.
Tiling window managers are usually only preferred by those who spend too much time in the terminal.
Last edited by Head_on_a_Stick (2018-03-13 22:17:18)
Offline
I wonder: Is this similar - or the same, just different configuration? Can someone maybe identify any tool showed on the screenshot?
Sure looks like a tiling wm (or maybe tmux?); looks like a file manager in the upper left window.
back on topic:
Last edited by PackRat (2018-03-14 00:43:08)
You must unlearn what you have learned.
-- yoda
Offline
^Gotta love grey on grey! For me it's still the best I found so far, although sometimes I like green on dark too. Your screenshot just tempted me to give slurm a try - looks great.
I suspect that's a tiling wm (though I'm not familiar with tmux). If you look at the upper right corner of the windows, there is something like [^]> and on the left <. The bar at the top seems to show the desktops on the left, similar to the screenshot from HoaS. Besides there are sysinfos: Wifi, CPU, RAM, Vol, Bat. That upper left window looks indeed like a cli file manager (cannot tell which one though), under that a chat (irssi?) and upper right is titled something "network monitor".
Edit: It turns out that this question was discussed already on reddit and other sites. It's AwesomeWM, with dvtm terminal manager and Absurd-Mind Diskusage Widget. AwesomeWM has a LUA config file. And that's not irssi, but weechat with multiline.pl and there is htop. There was a remark: "Can't tell what editor or interpreter it is being displayed in, but its syntax highlighter can't parse Lua." Twitter app: Turses
Thanks @PackRat, tmux is on my to-do list.
Last edited by martix (2018-03-14 13:58:54)
Offline