Well, I went ahead and installed Xubuntu.

Resizing icons worked to a degree, but the grid is still offset a bit, even more so on the vertical edges than horizontal, as you can see in this screenshot:

- I'm not keeping those desktop icons; just for illustration. :)
BFD, but OCD.

Still have the
misaligned sectors issue after resizing, but I'm not real clear on how to fix that. And from what I've read it may not really be fixable unless I reinstall Windows and get the numbers lined up from the beginning of the disk, and I'm not about to go through that hassle. They say not to worry about it if you don't notice a performance hit (what would you compare it to?), but
you still know it's there!

Also ran into a documented and long-standing bug regarding the double-clicking of the window title bar—in my case to hide/minimize it. Apparently you can't use a low/fast double-click speed. Some say you have to go to
Settings Editor > xsettings > Net and change
DoubleClickTime to 400 to match
dbl_click_time in
xfwm4. But damn, 400 is so slow; I end up double-clicking things I don't want to, selecting text and whatnot. I was able to drop DoubleClickTime it to 240 and have it work, but for some reason it wouldn't stick. And that's still slow. I liked about 165-170 ms.
I dunno. Just another case of ridiculously amateurish work in Linux. Like, this shit was reported with the 10 series. And it's still there.

I've also had a little trouble with editing the application menu, but that's probably on me. I read the Help page, but it assumes you already know a lot of stuff. But for instance, I added a Firefox launcher to the main part of the menu, but somehow ended up with two entries for it in the Application Finder, though I didn't add anything to the Categories tab or whatever. Speaking of which, I see that there's like 5-6 different entries related to File Manager/Thunar, most hidden from the menu, only one displays in Application Finder, but only as 'File Manager,' not 'Thunar.' You can't search for Thunar. It's weird, dood.
Oh, also, have you had any issues with right-clicking? Like, it doesn't always hold or sometimes it'll actually select the top entry? I don't know whether that's Xubuntu or my mouse, but I don't think I noticed it happening in Ubuntu.
Anyway, heh. We'll see whether I stick with Xubuntu or not. I would like to, for reasons I've mentioned previously, but it remains to be seen how annoyed I get with the little things, heh. Like I said, at least *buntu distros are easy-peasy to install and set up.
sinewav wrote:Apparently you can disable a process named xfce4-volumed in "Settings Manager >> Sessions and Startup >> Application Autostart" (see attached) and this will eliminate all volume notifications for the panel app and media keys, it will not differentiate. Given your lack of hardware keys this seems like a good option.
Cool beans, that worked. Thank you, sir. Kinda weird that had its own startup entry, though. You sure it doesn't affect anything else?
But, what I was wondering is if it worked in the reverse. That is, when you press one of your volume keys, does it bring up both the slider and the notification, or just the notification? I would hope the latter, because I would like to get a keyboard with media keys myself.
Phytotron wrote:Our recent banter in this thread caused me to look once again at
Ubuntu Studio, billed as "Linux for Creative Humans." [eye roll] The distro switched to XFCE a few years ago and I've have been keeping an eye on it ever since. They seem to have finally worked out most of the bugs. I'm now running this instead of Mint and really enjoying it. With Ubuntu Studio I only had to add 4 applications after installation. Quite convenient for me! I imagine it is hardly different than Xubuntu other than the default themes and applications.
Neat. Have you found that the supposedly customized kernel has made any difference in the operation of those applications, or is the pre-bundling enough of an appeal?