May be this was inspired by Mac-OS.
According to the project (http://code.google.com/p/gnome2-globalmenu/):
"There are several advantages by adopting a shared global menu bar in Gnome (thanks Matthew for organizing these):
- It works better with narrow windows, because the width of the menus isn't limited to the width of the window. (This is a problem for Gimp and Inkscape especially.)
- It's less confusing -- when two menu bars are visible on-screen at once, sometimes people choose the wrong one.
- Global Menu is the first step to move toward a Document Centric Desktop Environment which is, according to us, a long-term trend."
To install: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopExperienceTeam/ApplicationMenu
This is my Gedit screenshot:
Sunday, September 12, 2010
How to Find a File Looking Inside It - 2
Once I suggested Google-Desktop to search for documents contents. Now I will present two alternatives:
Beagle - http://beagle-project.org/Main_Page
sudo aptitude install beagle
Tracker - http://projects.gnome.org/tracker/
sudo aptitude install tracker-search-tool
Both are easier to install than Google-Desktop and has a nice look.
This is a Tracker screenshot:
Beagle - http://beagle-project.org/Main_Page
sudo aptitude install beagle
Tracker - http://projects.gnome.org/tracker/
sudo aptitude install tracker-search-tool
Both are easier to install than Google-Desktop and has a nice look.
This is a Tracker screenshot:
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