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Thanks, that's helpful. Chances are some of your issues will be (or have already been) addressed.
- Manual icon positioning on desktop seems to work fine here. Did you encounter any bugs or were you simply using an older version of Xfce?
- Xfce doesn't come with a Gnome clock and it does some things differently (more often than not, that's good). Weather reports are in a Weather plugin. A worldclock indeed is missing (thank you for the suggestion), but you can add several Orage clocks each set to a different time zone - I'm using this method myself.
- Volume control (a mixer plugin) has recently been improved but I still prefer Xubuntu's sound indicator. Not sure what you mean by "over 100%" output volume (is it some sort of a workaround for a bug elsewhere?)
Of course, there will always be Gnome2 or Ubuntu applets/indicators which are not in Xfce and often there is no reason to duplicate the effort. For these applets you can use an XfApplet plugin (works with Mate's applets) or an Indicator plugin (currently works with Gtk2 indicators).
Thanks for your helpful suggestions.
1. Are you suggesting that I can now shift icons a few pixels to the right in the latest XFCE??
2. The Gnome2 clock applet was just really great, I also loved the little map that came with it. When I needed to see the time in another timezone, it was always just a click away.
3. Have you ever wondered why you can't increase the volume beyond some point? Of course you can, if software wouldn't limit you.
The main reason XFCE won't be my first stop is it's dependence/integration of Gnome/GTK stuff.





Member since:
2005-07-08
I tried XFCE4 a number of times over the last year and a half. I really miss:
- Freedom of positioning of icons (I use my Desktop like I use the top of my desk, I put current files on it). But you can run XFCE with some other file managers (eg. Nautilus) to take care of this.
- The Gnome clock, with the multiple locations, sunlight-over-the-globe and weather reports. (The whole point of this article is, that this will no longer be maintained by Gnome).
- The Gnome volume control, that allows you to set the volume output “over 100%”, I don’t know yet how to do this in XFCE4 (though VLC will do this by itself).