Gee! With this thread I learned one more thing about linux GUIs... I
noticed that on 13.04 the Chromium is "undecorated" by default, but that is
not exactly controlled by the system, Chromium itself has an option
(activated by right clicking on the title bar) that controls the presence
of the "adit
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 1:12 AM, Yorvyk wrote:
>
>> Right-click on the title bar and select un-decorate. Also, if you
> right-click on the menu bar and the menu becomes a tab to the left.
>
> And, if you like the keyboard, lubuntu-rc.xml allows you to do so as well:
http://openbox.org/wiki/Help:A
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 12:35 AM, Andrew Diamond wrote:
> ... screen realestate comes at a premium. Is there a way to turning the
> title bar in FF off, without going full screen?
>
Hi Andrew, you can do so for any application, including Firefox, by editing
~/.config/openbox/lubuntu-rc.xml. This c
On 04/06/13 20:05, Andrew Diamond wrote:
Chromium has the added benefit of either eliminating the title bar, or
turning it into an actual component of the browser (I think it just
turns it off). Most of my computing nowadays is actually on a netbook,
where screen realestate comes at a premium.
Chromium has the added benefit of either eliminating the title bar, or
turning it into an actual component of the browser (I think it just turns
it off). Most of my computing nowadays is actually on a netbook, where
screen realestate comes at a premium. Is there a way to turning the title
bar in