Besides, the default look (default xfwm + Adwaita) looks just fine nowadays; except for the icon theme. The only thing I customize is the icon theme (elementary-xfce).
@@MarkHobbes Its cool and a necessary for X to have alternatives/competition, but Wayland just isn't there yet. The folks I know that do use Wayland have already done away with the DEs altogether and have moved to just a WM like bspwm or i3. Support for Wayland is in the works for xfce so I imagine by the time Wayland becomes a serious alternative to X, xfce would have caught up.
I don't think XFCE looks bad in the first place. Beyond the basic good looks, I don't demand super flashy or beautiful desktop environment, cos all those effects and beauty come at a cost - usage of more resources. But then again, for most people that's not an issue. I personally like to keep my computer's resource usage low even if I have high specs. Beyond a basic level of beauty that makes working on my computer pleasant, I don't want more. I don't switch on my computer to stare at the beauty of the OS, but to just get work done. That's the basic reason anyone buys a computer in the first place.
Exactly I found your comment now, after I replied as well with a very simular answer with respect to high specs and still using a lightweight desktop. I would like to add that it's also one of those reasons for me to use Linux (I have many reasons, but Windows so full of bloatware these days, I am still using it as well, but having alternatives is great, to choose the system I want to boot to fit my needs at any moment). I do not like to make my Linux system yet another slow system.
"Linux Mint tweaks their xfce desktop to look and feel like cinnamon, their main desktop" Actually they ran XFCE like this long before cinnamon was even being thought of. Heck this is how it looked back on Gnome 2.x as well. They pretty much kept it like this with Gnome, KDE, and XFCE in those days.
So cinnamon actually adopted the look & probably also some feel from Mint's xfce tweak … interesting! I'm running cinnamon Mint for a year now and absolutely love it - but now I'm curious, will give that xfce version a try.
The second XFCE panel is a relic from the era when monitors used to be small, low resolution and 4:3. So you'd need a separate panel for the launchers, so that the top panel wouldn't get crowded and illegible when multiple windows are opened. But with 1080p and 4k screens as well as wide screen monitors, the bottom panel is completely redundant.
@@loendsti It does NOT matter what you like, you do whatever you want on your PC,... the bottom panel is completely redundant HERE on the way is customized on the video.
As far as I know, XFCE is in the process of switching to headerbars. But the dev team is very small so it takes some time. But lot's of the settings and the task manager are already using headerbars. ... It's interesting that a desktop so widely used like XFCE seems to have such a small dev team. In XFCE I also like the balance between customizabilty and ease of use. When GNOME hasn't enough options and KDE has to much, XFCE is a good choice. One can change the looks without digging through so many settings or to install additional applications.
>When GNOME hasn't enough options and KDE has to much, XFCE is a good choice That's why I started using it (just replace GNOME with Unity), and I've never looked back!
Unfortunately, it doesn't matter that font is... On Plasma, all fonts looks terribly ugly. I think Plasma do not have a proper anti-aliasing and/or font rasterization.
@@KyleBroflovski4u I think it has to do with the screen it is rendering on. In my main screen they render perfectly, but on my older second screen they become sometimes just plain unreadable
if you are an ex-mac user or not, XFCE has an application launcher usually tied to Alt + F3 but clever people like me bind it to SHIFT + Win-key/CMD + SPACE . So you get an OSX style application launcher pop-up, then just start typing and hit enter, The non F-key shortcut is better for keyboards that either don't have f-keys, or have them in a Fn modifier, like a lot of 60% or less KBs, or laptops.
Even if I had 128GB RAM, a 32-core Threadripper and two RDNA2 GPUs, I would still be using XFCE. It's not just the familiarity it gives you (because indeed it looks like something out of Windows 2000 SP4) but the lightweight nature. I grew up quite spoiled, and would rather have Linux distros that on Idle don't consume more than 1GB of RAM, especially seeing as my Windows desktop is always idling with over 2GB of RAM in use. Nowadays I'm experimenting a bit and trying out Deepin, but before this, I had Debian Buster with XFCE and was able to customize it to my liking. Some people might scoff at the need to tweak a distro's DE from the get-go, but horses for courses, guys. Team Xfce for life here.
I think memory usage should be analyzed more accurately. Is the memory consumption mostly cache? Try scaling up your memory and see for yourself. The 2 GB of memory (maybe in 8 GB of RAM?) for Windows will drastically increase to 7-8 GB on a 16 GB RAM. Windows task manager tells you how much of a process is cache. Afterwards, try spawning tons of memory-heavy programs like Android Studio or even web browsers. You'll be surprised at how well your system manages memory; macOS is one of the best in this aspect. I never managed to break macOS by exploding the memory. But beware that having swap on can be a disaster in those cases. I use earlyoom in my Linux for this reason. But yes, in many cases the memory usage isn't mostly cache.
I got XFCE Mint running on a 2009 machine (350 MB on boot for a 2 GB machine was the main reason I went with it). The thing is used by my parents and being so close to Windows in layout really made the change seamless and brought life back to a very old machine.
Manjaro XFCE user here and I'm a new guy to Linux so have to google everything,but thanks to Nick and his channel ,it makes things easy to use and learn Linux!! Banging Vid Nick!! Merci
Nice Video. Very nice overview of XFCE. 9:23 very true. I run linux mint (sarah) xfce from 2016 to 2019 and MX Linux Xfce since 2019 on a Lenovo n200 3000 laptop thats purchased more than a decade ago (2008). Its sufficient enough for my browsing and occasional media consumption with 2gb ram. The laptop would've been collecting dust if I haven't made the switch from win 10 all thanks to XFCE.
At 6:19, I didn't even realise I was staring at Windows 10. I was like "oooo now this looks like a fresh Linux customisation I can get behind! That file manager looks pro. Wait. The Windows 10 start menu?!"
Lubuntu is cool, but I think Linux Mint implementations of Xfce is much better and useful. It comes with lots of useful apps preinstalled, that really makes sense for the average user.
@@MarkHobbes I had a rough time with Lubuntu on my laptop. But, regarding mint xfce, I agree with you. However, I would prefer Cinnamon when using mint. It has clean and simple, yet modern interface, takes the cake...
Super video! I've tried so many DE's, but XFCE is always the one I come back to. MX Linux is ruling right now, and I can understand why - it's the most stable distro I've ever used, and with a little work, can be absolutely beautiful! Don't write it off for it's default theme, coz it's bland and boring! Get yourself a nice new theme for your GTK+, your XFWM4, and your icons, and you will have something amazing and reliable.
Im also a MXLinux user ~4years and i love it. Just recently received an old Mac Book and out of the handful of ditros i tested MX ended up being the only that worked with no tweaking or driver issues. Conky Widgets also help the feel of the Desktop
XFCE is perfect for monitor below 1366x768. It's straight forward, effective, fast. But for 1920x1080 above, it still has a minor downside about fractional scaling. Deepin DE and KDE plasma the only desktop has mature fractional scaling in linux.
You can scale! But I think it is strange you have to set a number below 1 to scale up. and over 1 to scale down. I am scaling 1920x1080 up with 10% by setting scale to 0.9. If writing 1.1 things will be even smaller. :-)
I'm running MXLinux with its XFCE desktop and am very happy with it. I don't want eye candy, I want functionality and I have it in this mid-weight environment. Maybe not for everyone but I am very happy as things are.
XFCE isn't for everyone, but for me coming from Peppermint with it's mix of LXDE and XFCE, I had to have XFCE environment again. On my Linux Mint XFCE as I'm not a fan of Thunar, used to using Nemo in Peppermint, so set Nemo as default and everything just works, from opening terminal with Nemo, to right clicking the desktop to change wallpapers. I also made my own dark theme, as wanted to take memories of Mark Greaves with me, using his theme as a template for my own. Every time I switch my computer on I say hello to Mark. I run my Mint with AMD Ryzen 2600 CPU, using Nvidia 1660 for display on a ASROCK B450M Pro4 motherboard, 16GB of ram 3200Hrtz. SSD setup with Icy Docks, meaning I can swap out SSD's at anytime saving on taking the side off of my computer. What I love about Linux is it's versatile, will do what you want it to do within reason.
One thing that never seems to get mentioned with XFCE is the window manager options, as far as I'm aware its window manager (along with Kwin, Openbox, and Compiz) is the only one that gives you decent placement options, for example I can easily disable raise on click, so then my terminal window won't get sent to the back when I click on firefox to copy some text from a webpage, and if I open 2 terminals or 2 file managers they will be placed side by side, instead of in a cascade placement like all the other modern GTK desktops seem to do these days, its like these modern GTK desktops have gone the Gnome 3 route and removed configuration options, I've tried all these modern GTK desktop environments and while they look nice I simply can't use them due to lack of configuration options, so I stick with XFCE with Compiz (the original 0.8 version of Compiz still seems to be the fastest compositing window manager)
You can change its size.. and its placement.. and hide it. I have a main panel(panel 1) at the top of my primary screen and then two secondary panels(panels 2 & 3), one at each bottom corner which is mirrored to every screen. Panel 1 is set to 32 pixel height, 85% opacity on enter, 75% opacity on exit, always shown. Panels 2 & 3 are set to 24 pixels, 'smart hide'(they automatically hide if there's a window in that area, but they automatically show if the area is clear or if you mouse-over the edge), 85% opacity on enter, 75% opacity on exit. XFCE can be good at getting out of your way if you tell it to, and still gives you what you need to get your work done.
@@glowiak3430 On *this* system, nearly 1.4 GBs, though I do have a lot of panel plugins/applets(like 25+). GTK/+ itself is pretty large, so that tends to cause a lot of the resource drain. I could minimize it more, but that wouldn't serve my purposes nor my workflow. Then again, I also have 64 GBs of RAM in this system because it was necessary for my work. Just to quash it here, before it starts, in case there was any risk... If dwm serves your purposes, that's great. It doesn't serve mine, which is why I don't use it, but it's a nice WM and I can't fault people for liking it if that's their thing. I commented because you noted that you disliked panel 2 and it took up too much space, so I offered some suggestions to customize it, and included my basic starting configuration as an example which I recommend even for smaller resolutions. There's no need to compare whose WM/DE is better or which conforms to what ICCCM/EWMH standards better, etc. I've been through all that before both as a user and as a developer for 30+ fscking years and you may even be running some of the code I wrote during those arguments now, so consider me officially done with it.
It is not a question of look... for developers, xfce is a lightweight, easy, intuitive, stable reliable environment where the power of your machine is not bothered by the window manager. This is the reason why I use it on MxLinux and BSD.
Of course, it looks cool and more professional looking with your windows tiled next to each other and makes your experience with Linux more operable with just a keyboard. I think they should ship Xubuntu with i3 as default wm and call it Xubuntui3 or something like that
Maybe I am a young old-timer (I'm 26), but I really like XFCE and the clunckiness is not an issue for me. I don't have very strong laptop and still like playing games, so it's the best DE for me. I like it especially after my customization. Okay, not entirely mine, I am new to linux and I am using for only 3 or 4 days for now, so most of my customization, I did with youtube tutorial.
I like Xfce as a workstation DE because it have all the features I need but don't freeze on me when I happen to overload the CPU and as much as I love the GNOME workflow, even cutting off the animations the overhead was enough to stall, same for KDE that may be lighter than Xfce on RAM but not on CPU usage, also Cinnamon and Pantheon struggles when heavy calculations are done, Xfce gets slow on that, but still responsive. Also the combo Debian + Xfce really embrace the UNIX tradition and stability.
3 года назад+1
Your customized layout look really nice, good freaking job, awesome
Interesting conclusion, I find preference for UI is usually determined by what UI you've spent the most time in growing up. I started on Win 95 and used WinXP for years. I find XFCE is the closest to that old school desktop metaphor. I've tried a variety of others from GNOME to KDE and Elementary and I always bounce off attempts to "revolutionize" and "modernize" the desktop experience.
XFCE is my favorite cuz, first of all, My screen computer is NOT a Xmas painting, it´s work environment, and you get things done quickly without going Starbucks-Hipster (like Arch/Gentoo users)
I just changed my distro last week for an XFCE thanks to your last video about it. I didn't known anything about the DE. Funnily enough, first things I did was to remove the "dock" panel and install the whisker menu. Seems to me it's a standard procedure for everyone too.
I used Xfce for two years and it helped me a lot to get my design programs running in Ubuntu Studio, but now that I have a touch computer I had to switch to Gnome, because my pen was going crazy on screen. Love gnome, but xfce is in my heart.
xfce with i3wm blew my mind tbh, its really nice and fast and it integrates well, even the workspaces widget works! Im considering switching to it from GNOME
Budgie is just GNOME with a different shell. All the settings are Gnome related; All the Budgie's settings are a fork of Gnome Tweaks built into it; Even the "default" apps are Gnome apps. Budgie doesn't even have their own file manager, for this reason, they use Nautilus. It still needs Gnome and its libs to work; It would be interesting if it goes Qt as they promised in the past.
I give a try to different desktops every now and then. I always come back to XFCE. Years ago, when I gad more time to spend learning settings, I tried OpenBox. I loved it. But the lack of time made me go back to XFCE. Setting up everything through text files makes you better understand, but it was too time consuming.
I just installed MX Linux on my Thinkpad T420 32-bit(14 years old). I was previously running Linux Mint Cinnamon. I'm getting used to the system and customizing it to my liking. So far, I'm loving it. I'm running Kubuntu on my desktop.
I just got done with an XFCE beautifying project: global menu on top bar, bottom dock with catfish launcher, terminal command launcher, icon only task manager and weather, and picom with .85 opacity with blue on active tittle bar and .80 opacity on inactive windows. Fade in and out, rounded corners and a combination of black/ neon color designs. It's gotten really heavy for my budget laptop, but I proved it to myself.
XFCE may be a little heavier than it used to be, but now it's MUCH prettier. Not worse than MATE and indeed in some aspects more customizable. I recently swatched from MATE to XFCE and RAM usage went from 730mb to 550mb but it is absolutely just as good. PS also tried lqxt but it is seriously butt ugly and runs at 640mb. XFCE ticks all the boxes (low resource use, pretty, customizability). I can see myself sticking with it for a long time as it's really hit the nail on the head.
I use xfce on my 16GB i7 7700k gtx 1080ti, because GNOME is to simplistic and KDE makes me feel like I'm back in the 90s with that 5fps bouncy small icon that can't even render at the same distance from the cursor, and the laggy start menu that skips categories when you move the cursor accross it. KDE with nvidia is just a mess. XFCE on the other hand, has lots of features which won't disappear in future versions, as opposed to GNOME, and is snappy and smooth as opposed to KDE.
Wow!! Your videos are getting better and better!! I might actually spend more time trying out XFCE.. even though I'm currently fully invested in Gnome.
@@TheLinuxEXP not a problem! Super appreciate the work you do sharing your experience using Linux. You are one of the many that help me walk away from Windows.. especially the video where you used Linux for your actual work.
I run xfce on my potato desktop and laptop... Its really an old pal, in my opinion. So if you don't want to spend your kidneys... XFCE desktop is one of the great choices out there!
Been using Xfce for like 7 yeaars, it's all I really know. I have Mnajaro KDE on dualboot, and I think it's very cool, but I'm finding it near impossible to make myself leave Xfce. It's my first love.
The reason why I don't use a top panel is mostly, that I want my browser tabs to be at the very top of the screen, so they are easier to click. I really like your setup though.
My pc is fine I use xfce by choice and prefer it to gnome and unity. To me they feel like toy desktop environments and better suited to a mobile device than a desktop computer. Not played with kde but I love how lightweight xfce is and how customisable
Used MATE (Mint) for years because I never realized you could install other DEs without needing to reinstall. Played with Budgie for 6 months, loved being in KDE land for 1.5 years, even Cinnamon for a couple months. But XFCE just had that simplistic minimalism with the right amount of customization I was looking for
@@supercell1228 You can reinstall if you want, but this will result in the loss of all data in your Mint setup. If it's a recent fresh install, then I'll leave that choice to you. You can install from the terminal though with: sudo apt install cinnamon Once it's finished, logout. From the login screen you will need to change the DE you load into. If you're using the default Mint login manager, you do this by clicking the icon to the right of your username (should look like 2 circles with 3 triangles around the border). From here select Cinnamon, type your password, and login.
I really like xfce, it's my backup option with gnome after my favourite desktop, Pantheon. But I only like it customised, but it's the same with gnome.
On my 2 screens setup it was impossible to put the primary one on the right. XFCE always wanted the left one to be the primary, so I couldn't really use it when I tried it 2 years ago. Anyone knows if this is fixed yet?
Xfce is basically performance based. Low power, small size,. So when you cover more Xfce in future, please include performance and consumption metrics and comparison.
LXQt is ligher than Xfce nowadays. Even Plasma, it's close to Xfce, what makes it "huge" for some people it's the quanity of animations and effects that may trick them to think it's slow. I've seen Plasma running about 400 MB of RAM. Xfce is generally about this too. LXQt is 300 or less.
Xfce-4 is fantastic on a server. The first thing I do whenever I setup a new Linux server is to install xrdp and then xfce4 and enable remote desktop. This allows you remotely login to the server from any PC on your network and have access to a real desktop environment. The fact that its lightweight is a huge plus since I only want a basic, low resource environment I can use to manage the server (for when SSH won't work because you need a windowing environment).
I've found XFCE customization to be a bit clunky, it doesn't feel as integrated and cohsive as Plasma. It is crazy efficient though. At the same time, on modern hardware, Plasma provides comparable performance with some effects turned off, so I will probably be sticking with Plasma, but it is nice to see how far XFCE can go, and even if one doesn't use XFCE, there is inspiration to be drawn from this video.
After 18 months of distro hopping, I've settled on Peppermint OS 11 as my daily drive on my newer but "economy" level laptop(pentium gold). I'm a "home edition" kind of user and this is simple, quick and effective!!
the global menu is actually a valid criticizing, i remember that when reading about design and stuff, because the global menu is a single bar always set on top, has the highest accessibility or something like that in terms of design, i don't remember the exact words but it was something like "because it can always be accessible, it always has the highest ranks" which is true
The absence of "bells and whistles" like window animations is not a mark of an antiquated DE, but a feature for those who dislike that sort of thing. You wouldn't call a DE "not modern" merely for keeping old features (i.e. windows), so why would it be different for XFCE?
I believe in XFCE supremacy. I tried Gnome/KDE but it felt sooo slow to use, everything has an animation and fades and all that, with XFCE you just click something and instantly responds
Good job on the video as always Nick. How's the gala experience for you? Last time I tried the shortcuts got all messed up, could you share how you set it up?
"but first, let's pay the bills..." Or, as Steve Jones (Jonesy's Jukebox) says, let's visit the Duke (Duke Of Kent: pay the rent - it's cockney rhyming slang, or something, Funny though). Linode should hire you: I actually watched/listened to the "ad" whereas I can't stand most ads on YT
I like XFCE and appreciate your presentation, but after seeing several well presented adaptions critically reviewed by yourself, you unleash the monstrosity that you created...lol. I here by declare that you are the Frankenstein of XFCE and you should have announced "IT'S ALIVE!" prior to talking us through exactly how you ruined it! ;) At all times I respect your French lack of taste. I do enjoy your videos and your sense of humour, so keep up the good work!
Try the latest Garuda Linux XFCE and the OpenSUSE Tumbleweed XFCE...I can not find info on this. The Application Launcher is not a traditional xfce look. They look like the Launcher on Manjaro KDE, except it is resizable with nicer Icons than the traditional xfce....I have been using the Garuda Linux XFCE and like it as much, probably more than Manjaro KDE...Keep up the great videos!
Xubuntu has been my go to for the past 16 years, to the point I can’t even use anything else. I also used Gnome 2.x on secondary PCs I had. These days I still run Xubuntu, but set up to look like Gnome 2.x. I’ve tried other XFCE based distros and just can’t get behind them.
I need animations. I love KDE. I used to dislike Gnome for choppy animations but I'm starting to like it. But if it's light weight then it's easier to use remotely as there is no extra loads. Easy to use in VMs too. That's why many prefer XFCE, not particularly because they have potato PC.
this is my test result of RAM usage on boot: Mint XFCE ~ 450MB Elementary OS 6 beta ~ 500MB Manjaro XFCE ~ 550MB Manjaro gnome ~ 650MB Xubutu ~ 750MB Zorin XFCE ~ 800MB Fedora gnome 40 ~ 1.2GB
Hey NIck, talking about Linode, do you know if they have servers in Europe ? I want to setup a personal project but I'm hesitating. Nice video as always tho !
Hey Nick, you forgot to point out one thing that I've only seen in XFCE: right-click anywhere on the desktop and you can have another apps menu slide out of the the context menu. I love that feature. It's like having a floating whisker menu. Like I said, I've only seen that in XFCE, but I could be wrong. Do you, or anyone else know if that feature is also available in any other desktop?
In MATE, if you press Alt-F1, you get MATE's compact (main) menu wherever your mouse pointer happens to be. Also, while they're window managers and not desktop environments, Fluxbox, IceWM, and Openbox all do this, too.
I've seen the Compton window manager used on a lot of distros with Xfce, it's supposed to be the best match. I don't remember what cool animations it does or doesn't have though. I don't understand why you said you can't have a global menu with Xfce when you presented an OS that ships that global menu with Xfce. What did I miss? One thing I like about Xfce is the set apps it typically comes with. They're the same style of just-what-you-need, no-bloat apps.
I think one of the prettiest standard Xfce desktops I've tried is Salient Xfce, but each to their own I guess :) And, of course, you need to be an Arch fan :)
1. for global menu use AppMenu plugin, working flawlessly on my manjaro xfce (thinkpad t450s). 2. switch off window menu when maximised in window settings. 3. for me KDE is to complicated with settings hidden here and there and not intuitive background settings (wallpapers) 4. also xfce have very simple to remember keyboard shortcuts which are making workflow much more efficient 5. running XFCE for last 12 years thru mint, solydx and now manjaro. Tried others but always was coming back as found it most intuitive 6. look for xfce4 panel profiles to save different layouts of the panels on your desktop if you fancy change
All desktop environments use a window manager. I'm not exactly sure if you mean you want him to use a tiling window manager. In which case... it's very much impractical for most users and most TWMs take too long to setup
@Linuxspin It's okay looking but for most users it isn't intuitive to setup, The Linux "Community" should appeal to the public and not just desktop administrators or people in the tech field.
@Linuxspin I know about them bro, I used them myself. I even used to post in Unixporn, not TWMs but some heavy XFCE customizations etc. But I wouldn't say "most" people use TWMs or WMs. And they're not that easy to setup. You always need to know some knowledge
Much as I dislike ads, I love the "let's pay the bills" line.
Sponserblock users: What ads?
@@abhinavchavali1443 true
@@abhinavchavali1443 eh what ads? -Said Adblock,RUclips Vanced and SponsorBlock Users
@questioningfox thats what i do too
@FRIDO does it block the ads embedded in the video? How does it detects them?
xfce is super customizable and can look amazing all while still being one of the most lightweight DEs. Don't let the default look fool you.
Besides, the default look (default xfwm + Adwaita) looks just fine nowadays; except for the icon theme. The only thing I customize is the icon theme (elementary-xfce).
It still doesn't support Wayland
Right on. Good advice. I didn't like it when I first installed it. Took me some time to customize it. I love it.
@@MarkHobbes Its cool and a necessary for X to have alternatives/competition, but Wayland just isn't there yet. The folks I know that do use Wayland have already done away with the DEs altogether and have moved to just a WM like bspwm or i3. Support for Wayland is in the works for xfce so I imagine by the time Wayland becomes a serious alternative to X, xfce would have caught up.
@@zerotheory941 It's not about having "alternatives" or "competition" to X. It's that X is trash, and needs a *replacement*.
I don't think XFCE looks bad in the first place. Beyond the basic good looks, I don't demand super flashy or beautiful desktop environment, cos all those effects and beauty come at a cost - usage of more resources. But then again, for most people that's not an issue. I personally like to keep my computer's resource usage low even if I have high specs. Beyond a basic level of beauty that makes working on my computer pleasant, I don't want more. I don't switch on my computer to stare at the beauty of the OS, but to just get work done. That's the basic reason anyone buys a computer in the first place.
Exactly I found your comment now, after I replied as well with a very simular answer with respect to high specs and still using a lightweight desktop.
I would like to add that it's also one of those reasons for me to use Linux (I have many reasons, but Windows so full of bloatware these days, I am still using it as well, but having alternatives is great, to choose the system I want to boot to fit my needs at any moment). I do not like to make my Linux system yet another slow system.
"Linux Mint tweaks their xfce desktop to look and feel like cinnamon, their main desktop"
Actually they ran XFCE like this long before cinnamon was even being thought of. Heck this is how it looked back on Gnome 2.x as well. They pretty much kept it like this with Gnome, KDE, and XFCE in those days.
Ah nice to know!
So cinnamon actually adopted the look & probably also some feel from Mint's xfce tweak … interesting! I'm running cinnamon Mint for a year now and absolutely love it - but now I'm curious, will give that xfce version a try.
@@heikokraemer2735 cinnamon was made after gnome 3 changed everything, so their version of xfce was more in line with how everyone else was back then.
I love the humor in this video, I literally laughed out out at several points. Great video, as always!
Thanks :)
The why are you so mean part cracked me up!
The second XFCE panel is a relic from the era when monitors used to be small, low resolution and 4:3. So you'd need a separate panel for the launchers, so that the top panel wouldn't get crowded and illegible when multiple windows are opened. But with 1080p and 4k screens as well as wide screen monitors, the bottom panel is completely redundant.
i like having the panel on bottom !
@@loendsti It does NOT matter what you like, you do whatever you want on your PC,... the bottom panel is completely redundant HERE on the way is customized on the video.
@Nostalgia for Infinity I have not been able to find a good video for XFCE customization, this is now a year old
@@ricardo072 It does NOT matter what you think of the bottom panel in the video. If someone likes the bottom panel let them use the bottom panel.
XFCE does a lot of the layout of more heavy desktops significantly better, such as Unity.
Unity isn't just a layout. And no, Xfce does none of the things that Unity did so well once you got used to them.
Zorin Lite has the best XFCE theme yet. If you haven't seen it you're missing out!
Zorin os lite is my main os owo
Absolutely agree!
Hard disagree from me. The light theme is WAY too bright, and the dark theme is WAY too black.
@@WolfRites Yes but the icon theme and Zorin appearance are quite good.
As far as I know, XFCE is in the process of switching to headerbars. But the dev team is very small so it takes some time. But lot's of the settings and the task manager are already using headerbars. ... It's interesting that a desktop so widely used like XFCE seems to have such a small dev team.
In XFCE I also like the balance between customizabilty and ease of use. When GNOME hasn't enough options and KDE has to much, XFCE is a good choice. One can change the looks without digging through so many settings or to install additional applications.
>When GNOME hasn't enough options and KDE has to much, XFCE is a good choice
That's why I started using it (just replace GNOME with Unity), and I've never looked back!
Can we take a moment to appreciate how awesome the Ubuntu Font Family looks?
absolutely! it is gorgeous and i use it on anything i install
They’re really cool!
@@that_kaii I do too. That distinguishable l is just perfect.
Unfortunately, it doesn't matter that font is... On Plasma, all fonts looks terribly ugly. I think Plasma do not have a proper anti-aliasing and/or font rasterization.
@@KyleBroflovski4u I think it has to do with the screen it is rendering on. In my main screen they render perfectly, but on my older second screen they become sometimes just plain unreadable
if you are an ex-mac user or not, XFCE has an application launcher usually tied to Alt + F3 but clever people like me bind it to SHIFT + Win-key/CMD + SPACE . So you get an OSX style application launcher pop-up, then just start typing and hit enter,
The non F-key shortcut is better for keyboards that either don't have f-keys, or have them in a Fn modifier, like a lot of 60% or less KBs, or laptops.
Even if I had 128GB RAM, a 32-core Threadripper and two RDNA2 GPUs, I would still be using XFCE. It's not just the familiarity it gives you (because indeed it looks like something out of Windows 2000 SP4) but the lightweight nature. I grew up quite spoiled, and would rather have Linux distros that on Idle don't consume more than 1GB of RAM, especially seeing as my Windows desktop is always idling with over 2GB of RAM in use.
Nowadays I'm experimenting a bit and trying out Deepin, but before this, I had Debian Buster with XFCE and was able to customize it to my liking.
Some people might scoff at the need to tweak a distro's DE from the get-go, but horses for courses, guys.
Team Xfce for life here.
same here! using fedora 37 LXDE switching to slackware or vanilla Debian XFCE with 32gb ram.. XP.
I think memory usage should be analyzed more accurately. Is the memory consumption mostly cache? Try scaling up your memory and see for yourself. The 2 GB of memory (maybe in 8 GB of RAM?) for Windows will drastically increase to 7-8 GB on a 16 GB RAM. Windows task manager tells you how much of a process is cache. Afterwards, try spawning tons of memory-heavy programs like Android Studio or even web browsers. You'll be surprised at how well your system manages memory; macOS is one of the best in this aspect. I never managed to break macOS by exploding the memory. But beware that having swap on can be a disaster in those cases. I use earlyoom in my Linux for this reason. But yes, in many cases the memory usage isn't mostly cache.
I got XFCE Mint running on a 2009 machine (350 MB on boot for a 2 GB machine was the main reason I went with it). The thing is used by my parents and being so close to Windows in layout really made the change seamless and brought life back to a very old machine.
Manjaro XFCE user here and I'm a new guy to Linux so have to google everything,but thanks to Nick and his channel ,it makes things easy to use and learn Linux!! Banging Vid Nick!! Merci
Nice Video. Very nice overview of XFCE.
9:23 very true. I run linux mint (sarah) xfce from 2016 to 2019 and MX Linux Xfce since 2019 on a Lenovo n200 3000 laptop thats purchased more than a decade ago (2008). Its sufficient enough for my browsing and occasional media consumption with 2gb ram. The laptop would've been collecting dust if I haven't made the switch from win 10 all thanks to XFCE.
I'm over here using xfce4 for the last 7 years with Gentoo. It's honestly the best for low end computers.
how are you putting up with compiling software on a low end computer?
@@MenacingPerson distcc and really with the right flags even a pi zero doesn't take more than a minute to compile something big
6:24
Indeed a super original look
every linux wants to be a win10 :P
@@orkhepaj or now Windows 11 want to look like Deepin DE in Linux or Zorin IS
@@edwinpj7637 No it doesn't , there is just so many linux distros it is impossible to make something doesn't look like one of them
At 6:19, I didn't even realise I was staring at Windows 10. I was like "oooo now this looks like a fresh Linux customisation I can get behind! That file manager looks pro. Wait. The Windows 10 start menu?!"
I love xfce, especially xubuntu... It perfectly meets my requirement, clean, minimal and lightweight high performance desktop environment.
Do you have issues with touchpad reverse scroll? Is there any way to fix them?
Lubuntu is cool, but I think Linux Mint implementations of Xfce is much better and useful. It comes with lots of useful apps preinstalled, that really makes sense for the average user.
@@nauq302 I don't have any issue with touchpad, but I am recently having a graphical glitch on screen upon logging in...
@@MarkHobbes I had a rough time with Lubuntu on my laptop. But, regarding mint xfce, I agree with you. However, I would prefer Cinnamon when using mint. It has clean and simple, yet modern interface, takes the cake...
@@nauq302 Which natural scroll style are you using? Two-finger scroll, side-area scroll, or three-finger gesture-style scroll?
Super video! I've tried so many DE's, but XFCE is always the one I come back to. MX Linux is ruling right now, and I can understand why - it's the most stable distro I've ever used, and with a little work, can be absolutely beautiful! Don't write it off for it's default theme, coz it's bland and boring! Get yourself a nice new theme for your GTK+, your XFWM4, and your icons, and you will have something amazing and reliable.
Im also a MXLinux user ~4years and i love it. Just recently received an old Mac Book and out of the handful of ditros i tested MX ended up being the only that worked with no tweaking or driver issues. Conky Widgets also help the feel of the Desktop
your more recent videos are so much better, I wasn't expecting the little sound clips lol I love XFCE
XFCE is perfect for monitor below 1366x768. It's straight forward, effective, fast.
But for 1920x1080 above, it still has a minor downside about fractional scaling.
Deepin DE and KDE plasma the only desktop has mature fractional scaling in linux.
Don't you think GNOME does a good job in this too?
You can scale! But I think it is strange you have to set a number below 1 to scale up. and over 1 to scale down.
I am scaling 1920x1080 up with 10% by setting scale to 0.9. If writing 1.1 things will be even smaller. :-)
I'm running MXLinux with its XFCE desktop and am very happy with it. I don't want eye candy, I want functionality and I have it in this mid-weight environment. Maybe not for everyone but I am very happy as things are.
MX Linux gang
XFCE isn't for everyone, but for me coming from Peppermint with it's mix of LXDE and XFCE, I had to have XFCE environment again.
On my Linux Mint XFCE as I'm not a fan of Thunar, used to using Nemo in Peppermint, so set Nemo as default and everything just works, from opening terminal with Nemo, to right clicking the desktop to change wallpapers. I also made my own dark theme, as wanted to take memories of Mark Greaves with me, using his theme as a template for my own. Every time I switch my computer on I say hello to Mark. I run my Mint with AMD Ryzen 2600 CPU, using Nvidia 1660 for display on a ASROCK B450M Pro4 motherboard, 16GB of ram 3200Hrtz. SSD setup with Icy Docks, meaning I can swap out SSD's at anytime saving on taking the side off of my computer. What I love about Linux is it's versatile, will do what you want it to do within reason.
PeppermintOS also uses XFCE and has an really beautiful and modern interface.
Perfect timing! I needed this for alpine linux!
Edit: Didn't realize that you were going to talk about distros that use XFCE, my bad!
Is this guy spying me? I just install Linux Mint XFCE this morning in an old laptop and I am about to customize it. Thanks for the video. 😁
One thing that never seems to get mentioned with XFCE is the window manager options, as far as I'm aware its window manager (along with Kwin, Openbox, and Compiz) is the only one that gives you decent placement options, for example I can easily disable raise on click, so then my terminal window won't get sent to the back when I click on firefox to copy some text from a webpage, and if I open 2 terminals or 2 file managers they will be placed side by side, instead of in a cascade placement like all the other modern GTK desktops seem to do these days, its like these modern GTK desktops have gone the Gnome 3 route and removed configuration options, I've tried all these modern GTK desktop environments and while they look nice I simply can't use them due to lack of configuration options, so I stick with XFCE with Compiz (the original 0.8 version of Compiz still seems to be the fastest compositing window manager)
4:07 I hate Panel 2, because it's occupying a lot of space and it's useless. Especially on small monitors (mine is 1366x768)
Same, and same monitor size
You can change its size.. and its placement.. and hide it. I have a main panel(panel 1) at the top of my primary screen and then two secondary panels(panels 2 & 3), one at each bottom corner which is mirrored to every screen. Panel 1 is set to 32 pixel height, 85% opacity on enter, 75% opacity on exit, always shown. Panels 2 & 3 are set to 24 pixels, 'smart hide'(they automatically hide if there's a window in that area, but they automatically show if the area is clear or if you mouse-over the edge), 85% opacity on enter, 75% opacity on exit. XFCE can be good at getting out of your way if you tell it to, and still gives you what you need to get your work done.
@@GeraldOSteen XFCE is too heavy. I'm using dwm
@@GeraldOSteen My dwm setup on CRUX 3.6 takes 116mb without any apps opened. How many takes your desktop without any apps?
@@glowiak3430 On *this* system, nearly 1.4 GBs, though I do have a lot of panel plugins/applets(like 25+). GTK/+ itself is pretty large, so that tends to cause a lot of the resource drain. I could minimize it more, but that wouldn't serve my purposes nor my workflow. Then again, I also have 64 GBs of RAM in this system because it was necessary for my work.
Just to quash it here, before it starts, in case there was any risk...
If dwm serves your purposes, that's great. It doesn't serve mine, which is why I don't use it, but it's a nice WM and I can't fault people for liking it if that's their thing. I commented because you noted that you disliked panel 2 and it took up too much space, so I offered some suggestions to customize it, and included my basic starting configuration as an example which I recommend even for smaller resolutions.
There's no need to compare whose WM/DE is better or which conforms to what ICCCM/EWMH standards better, etc. I've been through all that before both as a user and as a developer for 30+ fscking years and you may even be running some of the code I wrote during those arguments now, so consider me officially done with it.
LMAO that sponsor transition cracked me up
It is not a question of look... for developers, xfce is a lightweight, easy, intuitive, stable reliable environment where the power of your machine is not bothered by the window manager. This is the reason why I use it on MxLinux and BSD.
You could try a tiling window manager like i3. Would love to hear your opinion on that.
Of course, it looks cool and more professional looking with your windows tiled next to each other and makes your experience with Linux more operable with just a keyboard. I think they should ship Xubuntu with i3 as default wm and call it Xubuntui3 or something like that
@@raz0229 I use xfce with a global menu and i3wm. Works great
@@raz0229 xubuntu is literally Ubuntu with XFCE. Maybe i3ubuntu
Maybe I am a young old-timer (I'm 26), but I really like XFCE and the clunckiness is not an issue for me. I don't have very strong laptop and still like playing games, so it's the best DE for me. I like it especially after my customization. Okay, not entirely mine, I am new to linux and I am using for only 3 or 4 days for now, so most of my customization, I did with youtube tutorial.
I like Xfce as a workstation DE because it have all the features I need but don't freeze on me when I happen to overload the CPU and as much as I love the GNOME workflow, even cutting off the animations the overhead was enough to stall, same for KDE that may be lighter than Xfce on RAM but not on CPU usage, also Cinnamon and Pantheon struggles when heavy calculations are done, Xfce gets slow on that, but still responsive. Also the combo Debian + Xfce really embrace the UNIX tradition and stability.
Your customized layout look really nice, good freaking job, awesome
Interesting conclusion, I find preference for UI is usually determined by what UI you've spent the most time in growing up. I started on Win 95 and used WinXP for years. I find XFCE is the closest to that old school desktop metaphor. I've tried a variety of others from GNOME to KDE and Elementary and I always bounce off attempts to "revolutionize" and "modernize" the desktop experience.
I can relate to that. Windows 95 and XP are in my roots, and XFCE gives me that nostalgic simple but solid look and feel.
XFCE is my favorite cuz, first of all, My screen computer is NOT a Xmas painting, it´s work environment,
and you get things done quickly without going Starbucks-Hipster (like Arch/Gentoo users)
I just changed my distro last week for an XFCE thanks to your last video about it. I didn't known anything about the DE. Funnily enough, first things I did was to remove the "dock" panel and install the whisker menu. Seems to me it's a standard procedure for everyone too.
Looks like it, yeah!
Hey Nick, thanks for the XFCE series! Wanted to ask, what is your opinion on Cinnamon? Will you also give that DE a deeper look on the channel?
I used Xfce for two years and it helped me a lot to get my design programs running in Ubuntu Studio, but now that I have a touch computer I had to switch to Gnome, because my pen was going crazy on screen. Love gnome, but xfce is in my heart.
xfce with i3wm blew my mind tbh, its really nice and fast and it integrates well, even the workspaces widget works! Im considering switching to it from GNOME
Have you thought about trying out the budgie desktop?
Budgie is just GNOME with a different shell.
All the settings are Gnome related;
All the Budgie's settings are a fork of Gnome Tweaks built into it;
Even the "default" apps are Gnome apps. Budgie doesn't even have their own file manager, for this reason, they use Nautilus.
It still needs Gnome and its libs to work;
It would be interesting if it goes Qt as they promised in the past.
My reason for not using xfce is there is no animation. I mean no smooth effect, smooth animation etc.
You can change that and use another window manager :)
@@TheLinuxEXP right but I don't want to configure it. It is very complex to me. BTW thanks for this video :D
You’re welcome :)
@@TheLinuxEXP thanks :)
@@TheLinuxEXP You're right. You can use kwin to get the cool animation like KDE. But imo, they were not stable for me every-time.
I give a try to different desktops every now and then. I always come back to XFCE.
Years ago, when I gad more time to spend learning settings, I tried OpenBox. I loved it. But the lack of time made me go back to XFCE. Setting up everything through text files makes you better understand, but it was too time consuming.
Is elementaryOS main theme actually a fork of Greybird? It looks so much similar.
Probably. At least the icon theme is the same.
I just installed MX Linux on my Thinkpad T420 32-bit(14 years old). I was previously running Linux Mint Cinnamon. I'm getting used to the system and customizing it to my liking. So far, I'm loving it. I'm running Kubuntu on my desktop.
I just got done with an XFCE beautifying project: global menu on top bar, bottom dock with catfish launcher, terminal command launcher, icon only task manager and weather, and picom with .85 opacity with blue on active tittle bar and .80 opacity on inactive windows. Fade in and out, rounded corners and a combination of black/ neon color designs. It's gotten really heavy for my budget laptop, but I proved it to myself.
XFCE may be a little heavier than it used to be, but now it's MUCH prettier. Not worse than MATE and indeed in some aspects more customizable. I recently swatched from MATE to XFCE and RAM usage went from 730mb to 550mb but it is absolutely just as good. PS also tried lqxt but it is seriously butt ugly and runs at 640mb. XFCE ticks all the boxes (low resource use, pretty, customizability). I can see myself sticking with it for a long time as it's really hit the nail on the head.
I use xfce on my 16GB i7 7700k gtx 1080ti, because GNOME is to simplistic and KDE makes me feel like I'm back in the 90s with that 5fps bouncy small icon that can't even render at the same distance from the cursor, and the laggy start menu that skips categories when you move the cursor accross it. KDE with nvidia is just a mess.
XFCE on the other hand, has lots of features which won't disappear in future versions, as opposed to GNOME, and is snappy and smooth as opposed to KDE.
Wow!! Your videos are getting better and better!! I might actually spend more time trying out XFCE.. even though I'm currently fully invested in Gnome.
Thanks :)
@@TheLinuxEXP not a problem! Super appreciate the work you do sharing your experience using Linux. You are one of the many that help me walk away from Windows.. especially the video where you used Linux for your actual work.
I run xfce on my potato desktop and laptop... Its really an old pal, in my opinion. So if you don't want to spend your kidneys... XFCE desktop is one of the great choices out there!
The best thing about xfce is that you can easily integrate it with a tiling window manager like i3
Been using Xfce for like 7 yeaars, it's all I really know. I have Mnajaro KDE on dualboot, and I think it's very cool, but I'm finding it near impossible to make myself leave Xfce. It's my first love.
As na xfce ricer I think that with customization it can look several times better than say plasma, and be just as functional.
The reason why I don't use a top panel is mostly, that I want my browser tabs to be at the very top of the screen, so they are easier to click. I really like your setup though.
My pc is fine I use xfce by choice and prefer it to gnome and unity. To me they feel like toy desktop environments and better suited to a mobile device than a desktop computer. Not played with kde but I love how lightweight xfce is and how customisable
Used MATE (Mint) for years because I never realized you could install other DEs without needing to reinstall. Played with Budgie for 6 months, loved being in KDE land for 1.5 years, even Cinnamon for a couple months. But XFCE just had that simplistic minimalism with the right amount of customization I was looking for
How to do that
Share me video links of you have
@@supercell1228 Are you asking how to install another DE or how to customize XFCE?
@@sigh-cosis i installed mint mate but now i want to switch to cinnamon . do i have to reinstall ?
@@supercell1228 You can reinstall if you want, but this will result in the loss of all data in your Mint setup. If it's a recent fresh install, then I'll leave that choice to you.
You can install from the terminal though with:
sudo apt install cinnamon
Once it's finished, logout. From the login screen you will need to change the DE you load into. If you're using the default Mint login manager, you do this by clicking the icon to the right of your username (should look like 2 circles with 3 triangles around the border). From here select Cinnamon, type your password, and login.
Thank you, Nick. XFCE is under-rated.
I really like xfce, it's my backup option with gnome after my favourite desktop, Pantheon. But I only like it customised, but it's the same with gnome.
On my 2 screens setup it was impossible to put the primary one on the right. XFCE always wanted the left one to be the primary, so I couldn't really use it when I tried it 2 years ago. Anyone knows if this is fixed yet?
Xfce is basically performance based. Low power, small size,. So when you cover more Xfce in future, please include performance and consumption metrics and comparison.
He did
LXQt is ligher than Xfce nowadays. Even Plasma, it's close to Xfce, what makes it "huge" for some people it's the quanity of animations and effects that may trick them to think it's slow. I've seen Plasma running about 400 MB of RAM. Xfce is generally about this too. LXQt is 300 or less.
nah it is old based
kde is the best
@@MarkHobbes it doesnt even matter when we have 16+ gb rams now
@@orkhepaj i use 8gb o my main cumputer..., not everyone has or wants 16gb ram.
6:21 always creative Nick, hehehe liked that a lot.
Thanks :)
Any plan to make a video on elemantary os customization ?
Xfce-4 is fantastic on a server. The first thing I do whenever I setup a new Linux server is to install xrdp and then xfce4 and enable remote desktop. This allows you remotely login to the server from any PC on your network and have access to a real desktop environment. The fact that its lightweight is a huge plus since I only want a basic, low resource environment I can use to manage the server (for when SSH won't work because you need a windowing environment).
It feels like the quality increases every video
Thanks, I try to :)
hello do you know about safetly remove usb icon on taskbar xfce4 ? i cannot find it
I like and use the Mate black themes. It should be in your package manager. It looks great, imho.
I've found XFCE customization to be a bit clunky, it doesn't feel as integrated and cohsive as Plasma. It is crazy efficient though. At the same time, on modern hardware, Plasma provides comparable performance with some effects turned off, so I will probably be sticking with Plasma, but it is nice to see how far XFCE can go, and even if one doesn't use XFCE, there is inspiration to be drawn from this video.
After 18 months of distro hopping, I've settled on Peppermint OS 11 as my daily drive on my newer but "economy" level laptop(pentium gold). I'm a "home edition" kind of user and this is simple, quick and effective!!
Anyone keep staring at the poster in the back? I love how minimal and simple it is. I think it's for huel but I may be wrong.
It’s for elementary OS :)
@@TheLinuxEXP oh I was taking about the poster that says Blueberry Mint Lime Orange etc.
Desktop wallpaper looks cool too haha
Yeah, it’s an elementary OS poster
the global menu is actually a valid criticizing, i remember that when reading about design and stuff, because the global menu is a single bar always set on top, has the highest accessibility or something like that in terms of design, i don't remember the exact words but it was something like "because it can always be accessible, it always has the highest ranks" which is true
For Global menu, Xubuntu have xfce4-appmenu-plugin in the repositories, that let you add a global menu to the panel
I use Compiz in Manjaro and it works out of the box (or almost, can't remember, but I know there was little to no extra setup after install)
The absence of "bells and whistles" like window animations is not a mark of an antiquated DE, but a feature for those who dislike that sort of thing. You wouldn't call a DE "not modern" merely for keeping old features (i.e. windows), so why would it be different for XFCE?
I believe in XFCE supremacy.
I tried Gnome/KDE but it felt sooo slow to use, everything has an animation and fades and all that, with XFCE you just click something and instantly responds
The Rodent is going to take over this channel someday
Maybe he’ll team up with mirror dimension Nick
@@TheLinuxEXP *boss music intensifies*
00:31 Here comes a money.
I just want MATE/XFCE to switch to Wayland.
Try Fedora, I think that might be Wayland on Fedora 34.
Not for me. Wayland doesn't as yet have any support for colour management.
Mate/xfce is (I think) geared towards old pcs and they don't all support wayland so...
@@wolfgangzeintl6425 because I have an old-ish pc that doesn't support wayland?
@@wahyuman I have an old laptop and wayland works pretty well
Good job on the video as always Nick. How's the gala experience for you? Last time I tried the shortcuts got all messed up, could you share how you set it up?
@@TheLinuxEXP oh okay
Love the quality of this video, I mean the quality not the content. =))))))))
Is there a Way to have desktop dark theme and light theme for liberoffice? Tnks
"but first, let's pay the bills..." Or, as Steve Jones (Jonesy's Jukebox) says, let's visit the Duke (Duke Of Kent: pay the rent - it's cockney rhyming slang, or something, Funny though). Linode should hire you: I actually watched/listened to the "ad" whereas I can't stand most ads on YT
I like XFCE and appreciate your presentation, but after seeing several well presented adaptions critically reviewed by yourself, you unleash the monstrosity that you created...lol. I here by declare that you are the Frankenstein of XFCE and you should have announced "IT'S ALIVE!" prior to talking us through exactly how you ruined it! ;)
At all times I respect your French lack of taste.
I do enjoy your videos and your sense of humour, so keep up the good work!
8:50 global menu can be done by vala extension. im using it for like four months with no bugs
Try the latest Garuda Linux XFCE and the OpenSUSE Tumbleweed XFCE...I can not find info on this. The Application Launcher is not a traditional xfce look. They look like the Launcher on Manjaro KDE, except it is resizable with nicer Icons than the traditional xfce....I have been using the Garuda Linux XFCE and like it as much, probably more than Manjaro KDE...Keep up the great videos!
Xubuntu has been my go to for the past 16 years, to the point I can’t even use anything else. I also used Gnome 2.x on secondary PCs I had. These days I still run Xubuntu, but set up to look like Gnome 2.x.
I’ve tried other XFCE based distros and just can’t get behind them.
I need animations. I love KDE. I used to dislike Gnome for choppy animations but I'm starting to like it. But if it's light weight then it's easier to use remotely as there is no extra loads. Easy to use in VMs too. That's why many prefer XFCE, not particularly because they have potato PC.
Where can I get that background at 5:38
I wonder how different Zorin OS Lite running Xfce is from the Gnome version of Core or Ultimate.
How is it different? Do you mean perfomance related? ram usage?
ever since ive been using linux ive always thought [KDE] looks bad and is hard to use. Has that changed? [not yet]
I wonder whats the point of having differemt editions of mint if theyre hoing to make them look and function pretty much identically.
this is my test result of RAM usage on boot:
Mint XFCE ~ 450MB
Elementary OS 6 beta ~ 500MB
Manjaro XFCE ~ 550MB
Manjaro gnome ~ 650MB
Xubutu ~ 750MB
Zorin XFCE ~ 800MB
Fedora gnome 40 ~ 1.2GB
Try on LXQt.
Manjaro LXQt was a better version, but Lubunt is acceptable.
@@MarkHobbes LXQt uses about 250 MiB
Depends on how much Ram you have. The more you have, the more it uses at idle
@@TheLinuxEXP Normally I give VirtualBox 4GB of ram and 2 core of Ryzen 1700, to simulate low end devices.
Hey NIck, talking about Linode, do you know if they have servers in Europe ? I want to setup a personal project but I'm hesitating. Nice video as always tho !
Hey Nick, you forgot to point out one thing that I've only seen in XFCE: right-click anywhere on the desktop and you can have another apps menu slide out of the the context menu. I love that feature. It's like having a floating whisker menu. Like I said, I've only seen that in XFCE, but I could be wrong. Do you, or anyone else know if that feature is also available in any other desktop?
In MATE, if you press Alt-F1, you get MATE's compact (main) menu wherever your mouse pointer happens to be.
Also, while they're window managers and not desktop environments, Fluxbox, IceWM, and Openbox all do this, too.
I've seen the Compton window manager used on a lot of distros with Xfce, it's supposed to be the best match. I don't remember what cool animations it does or doesn't have though. I don't understand why you said you can't have a global menu with Xfce when you presented an OS that ships that global menu with Xfce. What did I miss?
One thing I like about Xfce is the set apps it typically comes with. They're the same style of just-what-you-need, no-bloat apps.
Great video as usual! Thank you for the great video
Thank you :)
I think one of the prettiest standard Xfce desktops I've tried is Salient Xfce, but each to their own I guess :) And, of course, you need to be an Arch fan :)
1. for global menu use AppMenu plugin, working flawlessly on my manjaro xfce (thinkpad t450s).
2. switch off window menu when maximised in window settings.
3. for me KDE is to complicated with settings hidden here and there and not intuitive background settings (wallpapers)
4. also xfce have very simple to remember keyboard shortcuts which are making workflow much more efficient
5. running XFCE for last 12 years thru mint, solydx and now manjaro. Tried others but always was coming back as found it most intuitive
6. look for xfce4 panel profiles to save different layouts of the panels on your desktop if you fancy change
Can you please tell me what distro are you running with XFCE nowadays?
it's finally time you give Window Managers a try....
All desktop environments use a window manager. I'm not exactly sure if you mean you want him to use a tiling window manager. In which case... it's very much impractical for most users and most TWMs take too long to setup
@@Dan01-01 yeah...by window managers I meant tilling WM
@Linuxspin "most"? I'm not sure what you mean by "most people use a twm or wm"...
@Linuxspin It's okay looking but for most users it isn't intuitive to setup, The Linux "Community" should appeal to the public and not just desktop administrators or people in the tech field.
@Linuxspin I know about them bro, I used them myself. I even used to post in Unixporn, not TWMs but some heavy XFCE customizations etc. But I wouldn't say "most" people use TWMs or WMs. And they're not that easy to setup. You always need to know some knowledge
Can you do a similiar episode for mate and or lxqt?