If I'm going to waste time I'm going to do it intelligentlyĪdobe Air: I use this for Snackr mainly, and Pandora We go through about 15 movies a week between getting them in the mail and streaming on the computer Netflix: My wife and I are in love with Netflix. Gimp: picture editing (although I mainly use photoshop on my mac) Yodm3D: I use this mainly because it looks cool, but I also use a second desktop for editing pictures so I might as well switch between the two with some style.įirefox: I'm not sure what this is used forĮvernote: I pretty much replaced any text editor I might use (I'm looking at you Word) with Evernote.įlickr Uploadr: for quickly uploading pictures to Flickr
Google Desktop: I use the sidebar for Twitter, email, and weather Snackr: I once heard Snackr described as RSS feeds for people who have ADD I also like Yodm quite a bit too, it's nice to have a separate workspace for editing pictures. Other than that, it's pretty straightforward. I use Adobe Air for Pandora and Snackr and I use Prism to run the web apps on my desktop. Also, DExpose2 is quite glitchy.may end up getting rid of it, except I'll miss F9-F12. This is my desktop with everything showing usually it's all hiding, see: I'm still trying to hammer out my exact setup, I've been playing around with Samurize in place of the Google sidebar.but I just don't know yet. Questions, comments and suggestions are always welcome. Windows Vista - running Terminal and all of its components. Also, it works perfectly with a lot of wallpapers. I'm very fond of the set up, I like it and it's pretty entertaining to look at in a way.
*I use DesktopCoral to keep the whole taskbar in show when I maximize windows :] Then finally, we have the time, day and the date. Lastly, I have a launcher called "Boot", which when clicked, launches a standalone stack for "Shut Down, Reboot and Lock Computer". The music player is for iTunes (Yes, iTunes and it works properly). The + and - on the taskbar is for the volume, then we have the system stats. But unfortunately, I was inspired, so it wasn't an original idea.
Yes, I know it looks like a Windows 7 taskbar, but it wasn't intentional, but I take pride of it. The biggest attraction is probably the taskbar. Kaelri already provided a tutorial for this. (Note: This is part of the "something new" D) It's for personal use since it's originally not intended for this sort of thing, err. Pretty icons, no? Hah! They're from symbols from an anime and I made them on Photoshop.
The only change is: I changed the clock's code to have a 00:00 time display. This is one is a bit off the goal since this is similar to projectvirus' previous set-up - I'm talking about the Flip Clock + Snackr combo.
If you want to install a custom theme, navigate to the themes folder, create a new folder named after the theme you want to install, and save the color.ini and user.css files in this folder.Here, as always, I'm trying to make new concepts. On Windows, you can navigate to C:/Users//.spicetify to find where you need to save your themes and extensions for Spicetify. Now that you have Spicetify all set up, it’s time to install a custom theme! Here is a fantastic GitHub repository filled with custom themes that you can install. If you launch Spotify, you should see Spicetify’s default light theme applied. If you see an output similar to the above, then that means you’re good to go. Now run the following command, which will apply the default Spicetify theme and patches to your Spotify client. This will find your current Spotify installation. Generate the default config file with the following command. Once Spicetify is installed, you still need to configure it to point to your current Spotify install. If you see an output that looks anything like the above, you’re good to move onto the next step! Step 2: Setting up Spicetify Invoke-WebRequest -UseBasicParsing "" | Invoke-Expression