Linux Design

31 Files
Linux is not just for programmers. Users have long been using various distributions on home computers, and private and public organizations are migrating their entire staff to Linux in order to improve information security and open source. Every modern shell "out of the box" has a nice and friendly interface, and most tasks are solved without entering terminal code. And don't let the variety of available resources scare you - in fact, it's not hard at all to change the standard system design. And if you've used Windows before, it will be much easier.

This section divides materials into groups - file types designed to personalize certain elements. In particular, there are themes for graphical environments (GTK, Cinnamon, LXQt, XFCE) and window managers (Emerald, Fluxbox, IceWM, KWin, Openbox). Separately published boot and login screens (Plasma, SDDM, Plymouth). There are custom options for the Grub boot loader design - operating system selection menu. Fans of quick access panels will love the category with dock skins - Latte and Plank. If an empty desktop scares you, you can put Conky widgets on it. And for those who want to add new features, extensions for Gnome and KDE Plasma 5 are useful. Of course, we haven't forgotten about the standard resources that can be installed on all distributions and versions: sets of icons, mouse pointers and alternate sounds.

Using Linux you open up a lot of possibilities. Customize any build - from the popular Ubuntu and Mint, to pure CentOS and Debian, to the more complex Manjaro and Arch.