On Sun, 14 Nov 2021 12:43:13 -1000
"David W. Jones" <gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com> wrote:
I use XFCE. I have Trinity running on a VM. XFCE
is better and lighter.
On November 14, 2021 10:27:48 AM HST, Brandon Hale <bthaleproductions(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
> I've never run Rox, but I just took a look at it. Maybe some
> alternatives that could be very similar in functionality are:
>
> GNUStep
>
> LXDE
>
> Trinity Desktop (KDE3 Revived)
>
> Mate Desktop (Gnome 2 Revived)
>
>
> These all have their own applications I do believe and have a retro and
> lightweight feel to them. I know for a fact that LXDE will run on a
> potato. I use it on an old Acer Aspire One netbook. I run mate on my
> main machine and it uses modern gtk3 and is fast and featureful (just
> like I remember it back in 2009)!
>
> I hope this helps. You can also pick and choose which applications you
> like best from all of these and run the ones that you like.
>
> Brandon Hale
>
> On 11/14/21 14:58, Will Godfrey wrote:
>> On Sun, 14 Nov 2021 10:37:25 -0700
>> Bob van der Poel <bob(a)mellowood.ca> wrote:
>>
>>> Not to state the obvious ... but you could install Python2. 3 and 2 live
>>> quite happily together.
>>>
>>> On Sun, Nov 14, 2021 at 8:27 AM Will Godfrey
<willgodfrey(a)musically.me.uk>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> For very many years I've been using the combination of OpenBox and
ROX.
>>>> This
>>>> has provided a very lightweight and user-friendly interface. It's
also
>>>> a good fit for the Raspberry Pi, and users unfamiliar with Linux seem to
>>>> take
>>>> to it quickly. However...
>>>>
>>>> ROX filer itself is still fine after all this time, but ROX-Lib relies
on
>>>> Python-2, so all apps using it are now dead - as is the rox -users list
:(
>>>>
>>>> I can get round most of the ones I use but the two I need are desktop
>>>> replacements for are the Archiving program (which handles a laundry list
of
>>>> formats) and screen resolution manager (based on XrandR).
>>>>
>>>> The usual web searches don't seem to show up anything useful.
>>>>
>>>> Any suggestions appreciated.
>>>>
>> Well, that proved rather interesting. The upgrade (devuan chimaera to be
>> precise) removed python2 and, critically, python-gtk2, but it left the old
>> entries in apt/sources.list so I was able to reinstall them. That's a bit
more
>> breathing space, but the axe is bound to fall at some point, so I'd still
like
>> to find alternatives.
>>
>> The archiver is particularly good for newbies. It's drag-and-drop. Drop a
>> compressed file on it and it will decompress it, drop a plain file on it and it
>> will put up a menu of compression types. In both cases it *doesn't* delete
the
>> source.
While I appreciate the suggestions for LXDE or XFCE, while both
are
indeed lightweight, are a good fit for the overall setup, which is quite
deliberately RISCOS-like (which makes rather a good environment for an R-Pi).
I've been able to find a screen resolution program that works well, and is
indeed better than the original! That leaves just the archiver. This is a
hard nut to crack. I can't find anything that is simply drag and drop.
Possibly I could code this myself, but I've got quite enough on my plate as it
is :(
If you really need python2 in Debian (and probably Devuan), a friend of
mine said you need a package called "python-is-python2". That supplies
the python2 runtime.
--
David W. Jones
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community