Several days ago, I tested Rocky Linux, a community-led CentOS successor, created following thedecision by the CentOS team to discontinue version 8 ahead of its long-off long-term EOL. Long [sic]story short, my first impression of the preview release was decent - decent enough to try to polish itup for home use.
Thus, we embark on another desktop beautification journey. In a manner similar, perhaps evenidentical to what I've done with CentOS 6, CentOS 7 as well as CentOS 8, and let's not forget Fedora either, right, I want to do the same here. I wantto show you all the different tweaks you need to transform a rather dull server distro into a desktopsystem, replete with nice software, good looks plus the rock-solid stability and longevity. Now, embarkon this journey, we must.
If you find the standard Gnome desktop workflow restrictive, inefficient, wrong, then you may wantto change how it behaves. To that end, unfortunately, you will need several extra tools, as the desktopenvironment does not let you alter its default configuration easily. The first utility you want isGnome Tweaks:
This is mostly decorative - but a new set of fonts can also significantly improve the clarity ofdisplayed text. In the Linux world, the Ubuntu font family offers the superior results. Grab thenecessary files from any reputable font source you trust. As to the icons, I like the La Capitaine set, available onGitHub.
If you want to have a more conventional desktop experience, i.e., a permanently visibledock/launcher/panel with application shortcuts, in Gnome, you will need to install several Gnomeextensions. To achieve that, there are several steps. One, launch a browser, navigate to Gnome Extensions, and install the browser add-on. Two,reload the page, and then search for panel-enablement extensions. Overall, You can choose Dash to Dock (D2D) or Dash to Panel (D2P). I prefer the latter. Install it, that is,toggle it on. You will immediately see that your desktop has changed, and that the top bar and thehidden Launcher (available under Activities) are now permanently visible at the bottom of your screen,like you'd expect in a standard desktop configuration.
If you're running Rocky Linux 8 on a device with a small screen and high resolution, the desktopelements may appear too small. You may want to scale the display up. Unfortunately, in the Linux world,the only desktop environment with proper fractional scaling is Plasma. Other environments offer cruderfull-integer scale or partial fractional scaling (increments of 25%). Alternatively, you can simplychange the font scaling factor. In most cases, this results in a reasonably decent scaling effect, eventhough the actual interface isn't truly scaled up. We will have a full-blown tutorial on how to scaleGnome applications on HD displays very soon.
By default, you won't have access to various third-party applications for common everyday fun. RockyLinux 8 is designed to be a server system, hence gaming, media and similar programs aren't necessarilyall there by default. However, much like with Fedora or CentOS, you can enable a set of third-partyrepositories to gain access to these additional applications and utilities. There are manyRHEL-compatible sources. Here, I will enable RPM Fusion free and non-free repositories.
Please note that I've not put Steam in the list above, because that's a bit trickier. Well,tricky enough that we will have a separate guide for just this application. Not ideal, but remember,we're converting a server distro into a desktop, so we're already neck deep in lovely chaos. Plus,don't forget, Rocky still hasn't been officially released, so anything you see or read here may changeand/or become irrelevant.
Just download Google Chrome from the official page. Install it. This will auto-configure therelevant repository and thus subsequent browser updates. The repo gives you access to all three buildversions of Chrome - beta, stable and unstable. Install, whichever version you like:
You may also be interested in some extras like NTFS read/write access, especially if you'redual-booting, and/or need to access devices that (most likely) have Windows. In that case, you willneed the NTFS libraries.
And here we are, at the end of our journey. We started with a workstation slash server distro thatis designed for serious work, development and such, not for games or music or alike. We ended with asystem that doesn't look that different from most contemporary Gnome desktops, full of cool, popularsoftware. Yes, Linux lacks some of the stuff you get in Windows, but Rocky doesn't lag behind otherdistros overall. Most of what you need or expect is available.
Of course, the command-line way is a big blocker for ordinary users. But then, even installing adistro on your own (or any operating system) is a very nerdy task. That aside, I'm more than happy withthis transformation. The polished-up Rocky is stable, fast, pretty, and it has a lot of nice software.You could also try the self-contained packaging formats like Flatpak or snaps, which give you access toeven more cool stuff. Mission accomplished. I like. Do tell me if you need more tips and tricks ofthis kind, and there shall be additional articles. See you around.
I am running into an issue where my profile picture in Teams looks good when I am in a call but everywhere else in the desktop application the picture is blurry (i.e. - chat windows, when you hover over the picture in a meeting, etc.)
@mwilliams7581 Hi, I was having this same issue from a simple pic taken on my iPhone 14. I found that editing the picture and adding filters while still keeping the picture looking natural as if maybe no filters helped keep the picture a little crisp. I used Picsart and had to add about three different filters (you can adjust them) to essentially lower the quality of the picture, but not look like I lowered it. I think if I add one or two more filters would make the picture on Teams look crisper.
Blurry Microsoft Teams photo icons could result from low image resolution or file compression, affecting clarity. Ensure using high-resolution images and avoid heavy compression for clear icons. Adjusting settings or uploading a sharper image may resolve the blurriness.
To rectify a blurry Microsoft Teams photo icon, employ Remini Pro, a powerful image enhancement tool. Enhance resolution and clarity effortlessly for crisp, professional-looking icons. Optimize settings to ensure high-quality display within Microsoft Teams.
It sounds like you're dealing with inconsistency in the display quality of your profile picture across different areas of Microsoft Teams. While it appears clear during calls, it becomes blurry in other instances like chat windows or when hovered over in meetings. Despite multiple attempts at resizing the image, the problem persists.
Given this challenge, I recommend trying Remini Premium AI Enhancer. It specializes in enhancing image clarity and could potentially resolve the blurriness issue you're facing. It's worth exploring as a solution to ensure your profile picture looks crisp and professional across all Teams formats
So I have seen that I am not the first one to ask this question, but I have yet to find any true resolutions. I recently bought anew laptop, a Lenovo with a 4K UHD display which I already love for so many things. But, like a few other programs, the high resolution means the icons and menu text of PS CS6 are incredibly small, which may be alright on a TV, but on a laptop screen, it make it incredibly difficult to work. I have tried all sorts of different approaches in Windows, such as changing the OS font sizes and icon sizes, which do indeed change everything else on the computer, but PS is still the same tiny size. I have also increased the text size under the interface preferences to large, but with little real change. I understand why this is happening, but I am hoping that there is some sort of workaround, beyond just bumping down my screen resolution, which defeats the whole purpose of using UHD to edit photos. I have heard rumors of being able to code in some UI changes manually, but have found no concrete examples of how to actually do that.
I am sure that it would not take Adobe too much time and effort to create an update to help with scaling, but they are very set on pushing forward with Creative Clound, leaving the rest of us loyal customers to the dust until we pay up. If anyone has found any resolutions or workarounds, I'd really appreciate it. Thank you.
If you have Windows 10, simply go into Program Files\Adobe\Adobe CS6 folder and left-click on the Photoshop CS6.exe file. From the Context menu that opens, go down to the bottom, choose "Properties" and the Properties dialog opens.
It's only in CC 2014 that they have that feature for Windows. Their displays are called "HiDpi" and Chris mentioned the problems they had getting it to work on Microsoft. So basically subscription to CC2014 if you plan on a 4k laptop.
I work on a desktop with a 1920 x 1200 display, and I'm quite happy with that for the time being. But I do have some images on my website, with @2x versions for Retina/HiDpi, and they look absolutely amazing on iPads and smartphones. And I wonder if you might have to assess sharpness differently when working in PS/LR with these displays? As it is now, I can predict pretty well how much sharpening is needed for printing (offset or inkjet), and I'm thinking that it might be easy to oversharpen when working on a hi-res display.
Mine is so small it is virtually unreadable, and it's already set on large font size in the preferences. I'm on a Surface Pro 4 with CS6. It was pretty bad on my pro 3, but with this new computer, I really can't read it. I can't believe that after what seems like 5 years (I first saw a post on the problem back in 2010), this hasn't been fixed. I found a link to this fix in another thread and though it looks pretty complicated, It seems that I have no other option but to try it. -app-scaling-on-high-dpi-displays-fix/
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