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Thank you for the hint, but I have always found that not putting things on the desktop is the way to go. I have shortcuts in the Places menu for the most important. Editors typically have directory or project viewers embedded within.
Regarding viewing various system monitor data applets, like Conky. I do not feel the need to relentlessly monitor my system all the time. If I feel the system performance degrade, I will monitor my system. This is done with a combination of using the Hardware Monitor applet in the panel and top in a shell. Since I have been using the same computer for +4 years, I have a pretty good feel for when something is not performing correctly.
I'm running on pretty merge hardware, with pretty small partitions and pretty crap ADSL, so I find monitoring my system is pretty important but for that, I use conky's 'panel' window type, rather than using conky like a 'gadget'. With 18 pixels reserved at the bottom of the screen, I can always see filesystem usage, network activity, ISP data quota usage, CPU activity and memory usage. I don't have to disrupt my workflow at all, to figure out when/what something is awry.
The only crap I keep on the desktop itself is my xpad sticky notes (if I just used a text editor, I'd never remember to check it) and a conky news ticker for a few rapidly updating feeds I just keep a general eye on (my news reader proper is so full, it's barely responsive). It's not the most elegant solution but I can't figure out any alternatives. Any ideas?





Member since:
2010-06-19
I get around the 'I can't see the crap on my desktop' issue by using wmctrl scripts to toggle the above hint on my conky and xpad windows. You can also just add a 'Show Desktop' applet to your panel.