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Install Sushi File Previewer for Gnome in Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot/Linux Mint

sushi previewer

sushi for ubuntu oneiric

Sushi previewer is now available in the Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot repositories!

Sushi is a new GNOME 3.2 tool similar to Gloobus Preview that provides quick file previews. To use it, select a file in Nautilus and then press the SPACE bar.

Sushi works with both Unity and GNOME Shell and it actually doesn't depend on Nautilus so other file managers can make use of it.

Sushi is GtkClutter and Javascript-based and supports all kind of files like images, documents, PDFs, fonts, sound (by the way, you can't preview sound files by hovering them in Nautilus 3.2 like in older Nautilus versions) and video files, some text files and more.

To install Sushi Previewer on Ubuntu/Linux Mint open Terminal and copy the following command in the Terminal:



To use it, select a file (like a picture, sound file, etc.) and press the SPACE key. To close the preview, you can either press the SPACE key again or click the close button.
Note: after installing it, you may need to run "gnome-sushi" in a terminal to get it to run (or you can simply log out and log back in).
That's it, Enjoy
Install Faenza Icons in Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot/Linux Mint


Here you will see how to install faenza icons using the tiheum equinox ppa and gnome tweak tool.

To install Faenza Icons open Terminal and copy the following commands in the Terminal:





Now you need to install Gnome Tweak Tool copy the following command in the Terminal:



When installation finished, Now open the Advance Setting of Icons. To open Advance settings Press Super key and type: advanced settings click the launcher and do what you want to do with icons. After done your work logout and login again to see your changes.
That's it, Enjoy
Install Globul Menu in Gnome Shell

Global menu Gnome shell

Remember Gnome2 Global Menu? It's an applet that adds a global menu (the menu is displayed on the top panel) for Gnome 2 that wasn't very active for a long time because Ubuntu built its own global menu. But it's back!

Gnome Global Menu is currently being ported to GTK3 and an alpha version is already available for download so you can get a global menu in GNOME Shell. Here's a video with the new Gnome Global Menu running in Ubuntu 11.10 (with GNOME Shell):

The new GTK3 Gnome Global Menu only works with GTK applications (both GTK2 and GTK3) - so don't expect LibreOffice, Firefox or Qt applications to work, at least not yet. Also, it doesn't work with all GTK applications yet - I've only found one for now: Shutter, but there might be more.

gnome shell global menu

Here's a Fedora 15 screenshot too:

Gnome Global Menu Fedora


Install Global Menu for Gnome Shell (Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch Linux):

Gnome Shell global menu is available in AUR for ArchLinux users but if you don't use Arch, it will take quite a few steps to get it working. I've tried to make a how-to for Ubuntu / Fedora (tested in Ubuntu 11.10 with Gnome Shell 3.2.0 and Fedora 15) but there are quite a few things that could go wrong so you need to have some knowledge about compiling applications to get it working. Before proceeding, you obviously need to install build-essensial, etc.

Let's get started!

1. Install Gnome Global Menu dependencies and Git, Open Terminal and copy the following commands in the Terminal: 

For Ubuntu:





For Fedora:





2. Download Gnome Globalmenu 0.9 alpha 5 source file and extract it (this is only required for 3 files which are missing in GIT):







3. Get the latest Gnome Globalmenu via Git:




4. Switch to the Gnome 3 branch and copy the missing files from the Alpha 5 source files we've downloaded under step 2:






5. Compile and install Gnome Shell Global Menu:










If you get an error about Vala not being version 0.12, remove Vala 0.10 and make sure 0.12 is installed (step 1).

6. Fixes:

For GNOME Shell 3.2: Ubuntu 11.10 currently has GNOME Shell 3.2.0 while the Gnome Globalmenu Shell only supports GNOME Shell 3.0 so get it to work with GNOME Shell 3.2 using the following commands:











For GNOME Shell 3.0.2 (Fedora 15):







7. Now open GNOME Tweak Tool (install it in Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tool) and enable the Global Menu extension. For GNOME Shell 3.0.x, you also need to restart GNOME Shell or log out and log back in.

To test if the installation was successful, close all running Gedit instances and run the following command in a terminal:



Gedit should now use a global menu.

If you got this far and it's not working, it's most probably something to do with the Gnome Shell version in the GlobalMenu extension metadata file, so here's what do check/do:
Is the extension displayed in GNOME Tweak Tool? If it is, it should work. If it's not, it is indeed the version in the metadata file that's causing this
Go to /usr/share/gnome-shell/extensions/GlobalMenu@globalmenu.org and make sure the Gnome Shell version inside the metadata.json file matches your Gnome Shell version. After making modifications to this file, make sure you restart Gnome Shell and check Gnome Tweak Tool to see if the extension shows up.

8. Optional: if you want to have Gnome Shell Global Menu to start automatically at login for all the supported applications, add "gnome-globalmenu-manager" to the startup applications and run the following commands:




That's it Enjoy