System-wide, user installed icon themes are stored in /usr/local/share/icons, themes are in /usr/local/share/themes. Where should I put cursors if I want them available system-wide?
Putting them in /usr/local/share/icons/ doesn't seem to work.
@tripplehelix I know its probably not the TRUE BLESSED way of doing it... But just take a look at the home directory and how no damn developer respects the XDG desktop spec and plows their dotfiles and .dirs wherever they want... If only there was a place, like a .config where you could place the cruft 😂
@beardedtechguy There are certainly a lot of options and features, especially on the bottom bar, the side bar and stuff like that. I remove most everything from each of those and keep just the bare minimum of what I need and what I will use.
Konsave lets you save, apply and share Linux desktop theme customisations
KDE, especially, is known for its amazing themes and theme customisations. With that can come lots of tweaking, and then forgetting how to get back to what you really liked. Or maybe you want to share that fantastic theme combination that you got right with f ...continues
You are right, but one of the aims of the series is precisely to show you how to theme your desktop safely. All themes and procedures we describe have been carefully tried and tested by several people, in the hope of reducing the chance of breakage.
Yes! I was thinking the same, so nostalgic without the “O no, I went to many levels deep into Windows’ settings and discovered lefteovers from the 80s”-taint ^__^
"Script loading strategies are now employed in core and bundled #themes to improve #performance of loading scripts with defer and async attributes. Additionally, scripts on the frontend and login screen are now constructed using script helper functions, making it possible to utilize Content Security Policy to harden against any XSS #vulnerabilities."
Hello friends of #BSDCafe, the Mastodon Bird-UI is back and available among the themes. It might have become the default theme for some of you, but you can always switch back to Mastodon's original theme. It's not enabled for all locales; if it's missing in your locale and you'd like to use it, please let me know!
Stylus is a desktop browser extension that applies better looking styles to your favourite websites
Stylus injects its own CSS into targeted pages and therefore makes you able to override the present design of a webpage. If you know CSS, you can write and create your own styles. Otherwise, you can just install styles by other authors from userstyles.org (US ...continues