On Sat, Aug 30 2008 - 11:32, Steven M. Bellovin wrote: > On Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:18:50 +0200 (CEST) > "Joel CARNAT" <joel%carnat.net@localhost> wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > My Eee PC runs NetBSD but I would like to use some of the graphical > > applets that are used in the original OS (Linux Xandros). Part of a > > "PS" output on the original system gives: > > \_ powermonitor > > \_ minimixer > > \_ networkmonitor ath0 eth0 > > \_ wapmonitor > > \_ /usr/bin/keyboardstatus > > > > I couldn't find a homepage projet for them using google, freshmeat nor > > pkgsrc.se. Does anyone know if those are part of some meta package > > and/or if they are available un pkgsrc ? > > > I don't know those specifically, but from their names I suspect that > several, at least, are tied pretty closely to kernel primitives that > NetBSD either lacks or has in very different form. What, specifically, > do they do? I can make some guesses, of course. For monitoring power > status, I use asapm (though I'm working on fixes to make it compile on > amd64, it's fine for i386). There are several sound mixer applications > in pkgsrc; I don't have a favorite. Networkmonitor is something we're > sorely lacking, though I've personally been frustrated by the interface > and the bugginess in the Ubuntu 7.10 version. What do wapmonitor and > keyboardstatus do? > Wireless Access Point MONITOR, show available wireless networks. keyboardstatus show status for CAPS_LOCK and NUM_LOCK. The thing is I'm oftenly changing Windows|Desktop manager environment and I'm trying to find non related utilities from which I can get generic informationis not depending on which WM I run. I'm still on a quest for the ultimate desktop environment :) Of course GNOME, KDE and XFCE have their own applets but what happens when I decide to give awesomewm, openbox or fluxbox a try. What's nice with those Linux applet is that they ran in systray as soon as your WM supports it. I was on the way for "OK Xandros does it with IceWM & co, I'm gonna do it with IceWM, ROX-Filer & co". That's why I try finding those applets. Regards, Jo
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