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"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
I was trying to figure out if kwin had the ability to
rotate the cube
using the mouse
without typing CRTL-F11 first.
It appears the answer is "no."
Yes it does!
I'm away from my system atm, but there are two steps to get "the cube" as offered by Kubuntu.
1. You first have to change the number of virtual desktops from the default 2 to 4. I'm having trouble remembering the exact path to get to that, but it's in desktop settings somewhere.
2. K > System Settings > Desktop Effects, enable compositing, enable "cube", and "apply", and you should be good to go. Using the mouse wheel to turn to the next desktop works great on my system -- I have not bothered to install compiz because the kwin effects are fully sufficient to let me "spin" the desktops.
Odd how desktop effects cause sound "effects", just a guess... on-board sound AND video with shared memory?
The "crackling sound" that I get on my 64B laptop when the desktop effects are enabled is unrelated to the on-board sound AND video with shared memory. I get it when I play a CD or use Skype Echo / Sound Test Service. Neither of these involve video. Also, I have external speakers plugged into the laptop and I have also tried USB speakers which also give the crackling sound. My sound driver uses PulseAudio.
Sometimes when I enable desktop effects, I get a message from KWin Window Manager about slow desktop response. The cursor is slow and menu actions slow down. There is nothing in the system showing high cpu useage. I now suspect that the degradation in sound quality is related to the slow down in desktop response with desktop effects enabled. A solution this this problem would be appreciated.
dibl: I should have been more specific on my last post - I can rotate the cube with the mouse wheel (4 desktops already enabled), but I can't grab the cube with the left or right mouse button and manually manipulate it unless I hit CRTL-F11 first.
This was a feature that was available with compiz since kde3, but I can't make it work without compiz using kde4.
It's really not that big of a deal anyway - I was just looking to see if I had missed it somewhere. I don't think kwin has that feature available.
Right. The *buntu version of "Desktop Cube" does not allow the "grab and rotate" like compiz. You have to install and configure compiz to get that.
Not so. At least, not here on my 10.10 running KDE 4.5.3. With the Cube activated as well as Desktop Cube Animation, all I have to do is active the cube (Alt+F11) and then right-click+hold the mouse and I can rotate the cube.
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
In Kwin the only way I can see (without using key combination) to start cube grab is by setting screen edge, this is the method I use and prefer. In compiz the default is middle button click and hold on desktop/workspace.
I like the screen edge setting it's especially fun when someone else uses your computer.
Kubuntu 10.10 64bit<br />KDE 4.5.3<br />Kernel: 2.6.35.22 generic<br />Nvidia Driver: 260.19.06<br />Dell Dimension 9200 - Core 2 Duo 6300 - 3GB Ram<br />Nvidia Geforce 7900GS<br /><br />Linux user since March 2004<br />Linux user #526793
Right. The *buntu version of "Desktop Cube" does not allow the "grab and rotate" like compiz. You have to install and configure compiz to get that.
One option would be to use btnx, which allows you to reroute mouse buttons as key presses (among other things), so you can map a button to produce Ctrl+F11 -keypress (you can of course set a different shortcut for the cube action).
Since you probably need the regular buttons for other things, I'd recommend this only if you have a multi-button mouse (more than three buttons)
(Could be doable with input actions/mouse gestures as well, but haven't tried)
With the Cube activated as well as Desktop Cube Animation, all I have to do is active the cube (Alt+F11) and then right-click+hold the mouse and I can rotate the cube.
It doesn't work that way for me -- all I see with a right-click is the desktop settings menu, before or after Alt-F11. Ctrl-F11 makes it "quiver", Alt-F11 does nothing at all. Must depend on your graphics driver. But the mousewheel switching works just fine, same as compiz.
Sorry, ment left+click+hold the mouse (at least here) to get the 'closed hand' which then allows rotation/tilting of the cube.
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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