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Linux Desktop Hacks
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Description
With hacks that any user can follow, Linux Desktop Hacks demonstrates how easy it is to modify Linux to suit your desires. The book is packed with tips on customizing and improving the interface, boosting performance, administering your desktop, and generally making the most out of what X, KDE, Gnome, and the console have to offer.
Full Description
Table of Contents
  1. Chapter 1 Booting Linux

    1. Hacks 1-9

    2. Give Your Computer the Boot

    3. Kill and Resurrect the Master Boot Record

    4. Bypass the Boot Manager

    5. Set a Bitmap Boot Screen for LILO

    6. Create Your Own LILO Boot Splash

    7. Display a GRUB Boot Splash Background

    8. Create a GRUB Boot Splash Background

    9. Jazz Up Your Debian System Boot

    10. Graphics on the Console

  2. Chapter 2 Console

    1. Hacks 10-15

    2. Redefine Keyboard Actions

    3. Energize Your Console with Macro Music Magic

    4. Take a Screenshot from the Command Line

    5. Put Your Command Prompt on a Diet

    6. Simplify Changing Directories

    7. Colorize Files in Your Pager

  3. Chapter 3 Login Managers

    1. Hacks 16-21

    2. Switch Users Fast

    3. Double Your KDM (KDE) Login Screens

    4. Double Your GDM (GNOME) Login Screens

    5. Get Multiple Desktops the Macho Way

    6. Scrap X11 for Fancy Login Consoles

    7. Personalize Your Qingy Theme

  4. Chapter 4 Related to X

    1. Hacks 22-34

    2. Take Your Screens Black

    3. Spice Up Your Desktop with Creative Mouse Cursors

    4. Convert CursorXP Themes for Use with Linux

    5. Use Windows and Mac Fonts

    6. Never Miss Another Reminder

    7. Make Applications Trigger On-Screen Alerts

    8. Heat Up Your Keyboard with Hotkeys

    9. Get Hotter Hotkeys with LinEAK

    10. Access Windows and Mac OS X from Linux

    11. Run Your Desktop over the Internet

    12. Access Your Programs Remotely

    13. Add Depth to Your Desktop

    14. Give Your Desktop X-Ray Vision

  5. Chapter 5 KDE Desktop

    1. Hacks 35-44

    2. Make Konqueror a Window into Remote Spaces

    3. Konquer Remote Systems Without Passwords

    4. Ai Karamba! Flashy KDE Gadgets!

    5. Start Applications in Weird and Wonderful Ways

    6. Script Hacks with DCOP

    7. Create Your Own KDE Right-Click Menu Actions

    8. Make KDE Even Easier to Use

    9. Give Depth to Your KDE Windows

    10. Lock Down KDE with Kiosk Mode

    11. Run KDE on the Bleeding Edge

  6. Chapter 6 GNOME Desktop Hacks

    1. Hacks 45-48

    2. Randomize Your GNOME Wallpaper

    3. Grow Your GNOME with gDesklets Steroids

    4. Create Your Own GNOME Right-Click Actions

    5. Compile a Bleeding-Edge GNOME Desktop

  7. Chapter 7 Terminal Empowerment

    1. Hacks 49-54

    2. Share Applications and Monitors with screen

    3. Stop Using Terminal Command-Line Switches

    4. Ultimate Terminal Transparency

    5. View Microsoft Word Documents in a Terminal

    6. Display PDF Documents in a Terminal

    7. View Word and PDF Files from Within Mutt

  8. Chapter 8 Desktop Programs

    1. Hacks 55-69

    2. Reduce OpenOffice.org Startup Time

    3. Read Yahoo! Mail from Any Email Client

    4. Encrypt Your Email

    5. Reclaim Your Email with procmail

    6. Convert Your Mailbox

    7. Configure Firefox Under the Covers

    8. Eliminate Annoying Browser Stalls

    9. Get Browser Plug-ins Working

    10. Create an Internet Phone

    11. Motion Capture and Video Conferencing Fun

    12. Put Screenshots Automatically on the Web

    13. Scan for Wireless Networks

    14. Map Your Meatspace

    15. Connect to a Microsoft PPTP VPN

    16. Play Restricted Media Formats

  9. Chapter 9 Administration and Automation

    1. Hacks 70-87

    2. Automate Your Life with cron

    3. Update Your Clock via the Internet

    4. Start Desktop Applications Automatically

    5. Don't Let Elvis Leave the Building

    6. Clone Your Linux Install

    7. Forward Ports over SSH

    8. Take Control of New User Setups

    9. Send Email Alerts for System Events

    10. Create a Passwordless Login

    11. Magically Empower Your Network Cable

    12. Protect Yourself from Windows Applications

    13. Build a Custom Firewall Computer

    14. Link Monitoring in Linux with Wavemon

    15. Make Network Backups

    16. Recover from Debian Disaster

    17. Prelink for Performance

    18. Grab the Latest Source Code

    19. Speed Up Compiles

  10. Chapter 10 Kernel

    1. Hacks 88-91

    2. Compile a Kernel

    3. Upgrade Your Kernel to 2.6

    4. Use CKO to Make Your Desktop Go to 11

    5. Tweak Your Kernel Without Recompiling

  11. Chapter 11 Hardware

    1. Hacks 92-100

    2. Make an Internet Connection Using Bluetooth and a Mobile Phone

    3. Perfect USB Devices with Project Utopia

    4. Optimize Your Refresh Rates

    5. Print to Unsupported Printers

    6. Control Your Power with ACPI

    7. Use an iPod with Linux

    8. Sync Your iRiver with Linux

    9. Boost Hard-Drive Performance

    10. Accelerate Your Gaming

  1. Colophon

View Full Table of Contents
Product Details
Title:
Linux Desktop Hacks
By:
Nicholas Petreley, Jono Bacon
Publisher:
O'Reilly Media
Formats:
  • Print
  • Ebook
  • Safari Books Online
Print Release:
March 2005
Ebook Release:
June 2009
Pages:
352
Print ISBN:
978-0-596-00911-3
| ISBN 10:
0-596-00911-9
Ebook ISBN:
978-0-596-10518-1
| ISBN 10:
0-596-10518-5
Customer Reviews
About the Authors
  1. Nicholas Petreley

    Nicholas Petreley began his career in computing in 1983 as an Assembly-language programmer for a signal-processing research and development firm called Adaptronics, located in McLean, Virginia, and he hasn't been able to escape the field since. After getting a taste of writing as a weekly columnist for the Times in New Jersey, Nick began spending more time with the English language than with Pascal, C, C++, and the dozens of other languages that previously dominated his life. Nick's former lives also include conference advisor for LinuxWorld Expo, creator of the Golden Penguin Bowl quiz show, editorial director of LinuxWorld, editor-in-chief of Network Computing World, executive editor of the InfoWorld Test Center, award-winning columnist for InfoWorld, and regular technical columnist for ComputerWorld. You can find his current articles on Newsforge and in other publications under various pseudonyms. He is a columnist for Tux magazine, the author of the Official Fedora Companion, a part-time Evans data analyst, a freelance writer, a creator and maintainer of the VAR-oriented web site (http://www.varlinux.org), and a professional open source consultant.

    View Nicholas Petreley's full profile page.

  2. Jono Bacon

    Jono Bacon is an established writer, developer, and musician. Jono has been working as a full-time writer and technology consultant/developer since 2000, for a variety of publishers and companies. They include Linux Format, Linux Pro, Linux Magazine, Linux User & Developer, Linux Journal, PC Plus, MacFormat, MacTech, Digital Home, Newsforge, Sitepoint, and ContentPeople. Jono has also worked as a writer/consultant/developer for Trolltech, Apple, theKompany.com, the University of Wolverhampton, Delta Institute, and others. In addition to this work, Jono has been a part of the Linux community since 1998 and has worked for various free software projects including KDE and Kafka, and he founded Linux UK, the KDE Usability Study, KDE::Enterprise, and the Infopoint Project. He currently works on various free software projects, as well as for OpenAdvantage in Birmingham, UK, as a professional open source consultant.

    View Jono Bacon's full profile page.

Colophon

Our look is the result of reader comments, our own experimentation, and feedback from distribution channels. Distinctive covers complement our distinctive approach to technical topics, breathing personality and life into potentially dry subjects. The tool on the cover of Linux Desktop Hacks is a wood plane. For carpenters of the past, wood planes, which are used to smooth, shape, and straighten wood surfaces, were once indispensable tools. The typical carpenter lugged around an entire chest full of planes, each with a special function. This is not surprising considering a single piece of wood can potentially become bowed, twisted, cupped, sprung, and diamonded, all at the same time. Learning to use a wood plane is said to be a difficult and often frustrating task. If the proper techniques are not used, the plane will dig into the wood surface and ruin the board. Seasoned carpenters say that keeping a sharp blade and planing with the grain are the first steps in mastering this tool.

Bench planes, such as jointers and jacks, range in length from 9 to 22 inches or more. These are better than smaller planes for straightening edges, because their length enables them to bridge dips and rises in the wood's surface. Today, power tools, such as routers and power planers, have replaced bench planes for straightening boards, but hand or "block" planes are still the perfect tool for trimming swollen doorways and fitting shingles. Sarah Sherman was the production editor and proofreader, and Audrey Doyle was the copyeditor for Linux Desktop Hacks. Lydia Onofrei, Claire Cloutier, and Colleen Gorman provided quality control. Johnna Van Hoose Dinse wrote the index.

Emma Colby designed the cover of this book, based on a series design by Edie Freedman. The cover image is an image source found at Photo.com. Emma Colby produced the cover layout with QuarkXPress 4.1 using Adobe's Helvetica Neue and ITC Garamond fonts.

David Futato designed the interior layout. This book was converted by Judy Hoer to FrameMaker 5.5.6 with a format conversion tool created by Erik Ray, Jason McIntosh, Neil Walls, and Mike Sierra that uses Perl and XML technologies. The text font is Linotype Birka; the heading font is Adobe Helvetica Neue Condensed; and the code font is LucasFont's TheSans Mono Condensed. The illustrations that appear in the book were produced by Robert Romano and Jessamyn Read using Macromedia FreeHand 9 and Adobe Photoshop 6. This colophon was written by Lydia Onofrei.

  • Book cover of Linux Desktop Hacks