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Elementary OS Luna: The Linux Distro That Works Like Mac OS

Posted by Harshad

Elementary OS Luna: The Linux Distro That Works Like Mac OS


Elementary OS Luna: The Linux Distro That Works Like Mac OS

Posted: 19 Nov 2013 07:01 AM PST

Mac OS X is definitely one of, if not the most, consistent and aesthetically pleasing desktop OS on the market to date but in order to use it, you still need to get a Mac. If you work on a Windows PC and don’t want to build a Hackintosh, you can try this alternative: Elementary OS Luna.

Elementary OS Luna is a Linux distro based on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. It’s the second OS developed by the Elementary OS team after Elementary OS Jupiter (which was based on Ubuntu 10.10).

Elementary OS Luna Intro

The Elementary OS team was motivated by a "desire to create a Linux-based OS that championed consistency and great design", and their design ethos focuses on providing a concise and consistent user experience with minimal need for configuration and documentation. For us, Elementary OS is as close to a Mac OS as you can get on a PC.

Installing Elementary OS Luna

Like Ubuntu and its derivatives, Elementary OS Luna is packaged as a live distro. In other words, you can burn it onto a CDr (or create a bootable thumb drive) and boot directly from it for a trial run.

Try Or Install Elementary OS

If you find that you like it, and want to install it, run the Ubiquity installer from the dock and follow the step-by-step installation process.

The installer will guide you through the process, so it is a simple, fuss-free process. The installer will even help you install Elementary OS Luna alongside your current OS or replace it entirely.

Beginning The Elementary OS Luna Install Process

Elementary OS Luna: User Interface

The first thing you’ll notice when you boot into Elementary OS Luna is its user interface. Luna uses an in-house desktop environment called Pantheon, and at first glance it’s impossible to overlook its similarities to Mac OS X.

From the dock, to the top bar, to the subtle gradients and monochrome window design, it’s clear that Mac OS X was a big influence on the Elementary OS team’s design philosophy.

Elementary OS Luna Desktop

However, while the visual similarities are remarkable, they’re mostly skin deep. Elementary OS Luna is still a Linux distro at heart.

Getting Around

Elementary OS Luna’s application launcher is called Slingshot, and is accessible from the left of the top panel. Slingshot can display installed applications as both unsorted and categorised grids.

Elementary OS Luna Slingshot

The top bar itself is called Wingpanel. Wingpanel is as minimalistic as they come: the aforementioned application launcher on the left, a clock in the middle, and power and connectivity options to the right. Of course, Wingpanel will show icons if apps require it, but it’s fundamentally a minimalist and clean top panel.

Elementary OS Luna Wingpanel

The Elementary OS Luna dock, codenamed Plank, works exactly like the dock you get in OS X. Plank, like OS X’s dock, highlights the application currently in focus, and has indicators to tell you which apps are currently open.

In keeping with the Elementary OS ethos, Plank fulfills its role adequately, without extraneous customization and configuration options.

Elementary OS Luna Plank

Pantheon also has support for Hot Corners and Workspaces. In addition, you also have access to window and workspace overview screens.

Hot Corners allow you to execute commands such as triggering the workspace overview screen or opening Slingshot when your cursor enters one of the display’s corners. This feature is not enabled by default, but can be, in the Desktop section within the System Settings application.

Elementary OS Hot Corners

All in all, Elementary OS Luna’s user interface is a delight to use. It looks great, is smooth and responsive, and manages to be minimal without being too bare bones.

Elementary OS Luna: Software

The Elementary OS team’s focus on minimalism extends beyond Luna’s user interface. Elementary OS Luna comes with only the most basic applications pre-installed.

Amongst these applications are:

  • Midori, a web browser
  • Noise, a music player
  • Geary, an email client
  • Shotwell, a photo manager
  • Totem, a video player
  • Empathy, an internet messaging client
  • Scratch, a text editor

Elementary OS Music

Much like Mac OS applications, these pre-installed applications save upon exit and will restore to state when they’re relaunched.

Elementary OS Luna also comes with the requisite software center, system settings (Switchboard) and file manager (Pantheon Files) applications. It doesn’t, however, include an office suite such as LibreOffice. This might seem overly minimal, but it keeps to the design ethos: concise, consistent and minimal.

Users with more specific needs will have to turn to the Software Center. Since Luna is based on Ubuntu, there’s a large number of applications to choose from that should fulfill any user’s needs.

Pantheon Files

For an example of Elementary OS Luna’s approach to applications, let’s take a look at Luna’s file manager, Pantheon Files. Pantheon Files, like most apps developed by the team for Elementary OS Luna, trades customizability and in-depth settings for a clean user experience.

Pantheon Files doesn’t even have a dedicated Settings menu. This doesn’t mean that it’s light on functionality, though. With Pantheon Files, you’re given a choice between three different views (List, Grid and Column) and the ability to Show Hidden Files from the right-click menu.

Elementary OS Luna Pantheon Files

You also have contextual options such as Compress, Print and Send files via Bluetooth in the same right-click menu. These options sit alongside the usual commands for moving and deleting files. The side panel can also be disabled if you wish.

Pantheon Files Right Click Menu

Elementary Tweaks: A Plugin

One of the downsides of Elementary OS Luna’s focus on a concise and consistent user interface is a lack of out-of-the-box customization options. There’s barely anything you can do to customize Plank or Pantheon Files, for example.

Elementary OS Luna doesn’t have theme support built-in, either. However, you can get access to these options and more by installing Elementary Tweaks.

Elementary Tweaks

Elementary Tweaks is a plugin for Elementary OS Luna, accessible through Switchboard, that will give you the ability to tweak a number of system and appearance settings, so that you can get your Elementary OS Luna install to be exactly how you want it. Some of the things you can do with Elementary Tweaks are:

  • Change icons, themes, button layouts and fonts.
  • Tweak window animations and drop shadows.
  • Add and change keyboard shortcuts.
  • Change themes and icon sizes in Plank.
  • Switch between single click and double click in Pantheon Files.

Limitations

Elementary OS Luna succeeds at providing something that other Linux distros often struggle with: consistent design and user experience across the board — but only with the pre-installed applications.

Problems arise when you download applications from the Software Center. While they work perfectly fine, these applications were not programmed with Elementary OS in mind. Thus, these applications may not mesh visually with the rest of the OS, and most of the applications don’t save and restore their states upon exiting and relaunching.

In addition, it’s possible that Elementary OS Luna will just be too minimal for some users. The fact that it doesn’t come with an office suite or security features such as a built-in firewall may prove to be a problem. To cope, users may have to download Ubuntu applications that, as mentioned, will dilute the very thing that makes Elementary OS Luna stand out: its consistency.

Conclusion

On the whole, though, Elementary OS Luna is a good Linux distro that will definitely appeal to users looking for a stable and smooth OS that manages to provide some of Mac OS X’s visual polish and consistent user experience.

Elementary OS Luna will never replace Mac OS X, that’s for sure but, for users who are unable to run the latest version of Mac OS X on their computers, Elementary OS Luna is definitely worth a try.


    






20 Creative Branding And Identity Designs For Your Inspiration

Posted: 19 Nov 2013 05:01 AM PST

We previously featured creative envelope designs to showcase how companies can extend their branding efforts to print. The examples in this post however, encompasses a larger scope. These are identity designs for the purpose of branding, and they take a life of their own.

Using clever color coordinations, these branding attempts extend to company logos, pens, envelopes, writing pads, postcards, booklets, CDs, letterhead, business cards, ink stamps, and even mobile apps. It almost makes you want to design your own range of corporate identity, doesn’t it?

Here are 20 ways companies are using their stationery for creative branding purposes. Name your favorites!

SmashingNico by Nico Lopez

Self Promotion by Heidi Aalerud

Daisy Bank Soap Co. by Passport, Jonathan Finch, and Rosalind Stoughton

Melody / Arguile Identity by Jonny Delap

Visualworx by ATMO Designstudio

The Argonaut by Dawson Beggs

Self Promotion / Stationery by Genevieve Dennis

Stationery / Branding Mock-Up by infostyle.itembridge

Engler Studio Identity by Eight Hour Day

Personal Mailer by Peter Childs

BONSDESIGN by Leonardo Zakour, Gabriel Pollack, BONS

LIFE SHIELD SHELTERS by Lauren Coleman

Spencer’s Crossing by Jennifer Springman

Squirl Corporate Identity by squirl.

Platform (Brand) by Tim Smith

Chomp Identity by Logan Johnson

Union by Catherine McLeod, DAVE RODGERS, and Northink

Wanderlust by Foreign Policy

Branding / Identity Mockup by BlueMonkeyLab

Multi-Dimension Branding / Identity Mock-Up IV by yogurt86


    






Catch Snoopers Peeking Into Your Social Media Apps With PeeperPeeper

Posted: 19 Nov 2013 02:01 AM PST

Having access to social media on smartphones and mobile computing devices is definitely convenient, but it’s not without its dangers. Aside from the risk of losing your device, there’s always the chance that your friends, family or significant other might be checking your Facebook or WhatsApp messages whenever you leave your phone unattended around them.

PeeperPeeper Splash And Alias Screen

Now, PeeperPeeper isn’t necessarily going to be the solution to the problem, but it’ll certainly help – it’s an app that allows you to identify who’s trying to check your social media apps such as Facebook, WeChat and WhatsApp. Interested? Read on to find out how PeeperPeeper works.

Using PeeperPeeper

First, download the app from the Play Store here. When you first run the app, you’ll see a splash screen, followed by a screen where you can enable the Alias icons. Basically, these Alias icons are fake icons that, when pressed, will take a photo using your device’s front-facing camera.

Selecting Alias Icons

To maintain the illusion, pressing these icons will open a fake login or splash screen before terminating with an Internet connection error message. PeeperPeeper can create Alias icons for Facebook, Facebook Messenger, WeChat, Line and WhatsApp.

Opening An Alias Icon

Unbeknownst to those trying to access your social media apps, your device has already snapped a photo to catch them in the act. To see these photos, simply open the app and press the Preys button at the bottom of the screen.

You’ll be taken to a screen where you’ll be able to see photos of those trying to access your social media apps. There’s also a small icon that tells you which Alias icon triggered a particular photo, so you’ll know exactly who’s been trying to access what.

Seeing Preys

It would probably be a good idea to leave PeeperPeeper’s Alias icons in very conspicuous places, like your home screen panel, to increase the likelihood of catching people trying to snoop.

Conclusion

PeeperPeeper isn’t perfect – it only supports a handful of social media apps, and it relies on creating fake icons to catch intruders. But, if you use it properly, you should be able to catch at least some of those who have been trying to take a peek at your social media apps.


    






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