Re: Windows themes
Posted by Myrk- on Sat Jun 4th at 9:23am 2005
I use Tuneup XP, has a built in theme program majigger.

Myrk-
member
2299 posts
385 snarkmarks
Registered: Feb 12th 2002
Location: Plymouth, UK
Occupation: CAD & Graphics Technician
-[Better to be Honest than Kind]-
Re: Windows themes
Posted by thursday- on Sat Jun 4th at 9:59am 2005
Ah there we go. Now I put it at the bottom the Opera Browser logo won't appear like it did before. Argh.... I will figure it out somehow, bit like the desktop icon thing.

thursday-
member
235 posts
74 snarkmarks
Registered: Oct 26th 2003
Location: England
Occupation: A-Level Student
http://www.jamesdeth.co.uk
I WANT TO KEEP MY SNARKPIT NAME AS THURSDAY- AND NOT CHANGE IT TO MY NEW ALIAS OF THALDARIN! WHY? NOSTALGIC PURPOSES FOR ME! STOP ASKING ME IF I WANT TO GET IT CH
Re: Windows themes
Posted by French Toast on Sat Jun 4th at 1:16pm 2005
I'm quite a fan of Royale, Loco, just got it.

French Toast
member
3043 posts
300 snarkmarks
Registered: Jan 16th 2005
Location: Canada
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Re: Windows themes
Posted by Wild Card on Sat Jun 4th at 2:16pm 2005
I have Smartbar XP on the right side of my screen, with the Windows task bar disabled and the screen res 1152*864
I'd get a screen shot, but my Photobucket account exceeded it's bandwidth...

Wild Card
member
2321 posts
339 snarkmarks
Registered: May 20th 2002
Location: Ontario, Canada
Occupation: IT Consultant
Re: Windows themes
Posted by Natus on Sat Jun 4th at 3:10pm 2005
i once used some mac themes and object dock, but for some reason it deleted my shortcuts and then i started to hate it.

Natus
member
570 posts
74 snarkmarks
Registered: Jan 28th 2005
Location: Denmark
Re: Windows themes
Posted by G4MER on Sat Jun 4th at 4:25pm 2005
I have LiteStep on my system now. I dont use it much. Its not a theme prgram as much as a new UI, heck it unloads most of windows and uses just what it needs to still be a Windows Based Machine.

G4MER
member
2458 posts
360 snarkmarks
Registered: Sep 6th 2003
Location: USA
Re: Windows themes
Posted by satchmo on Sat Jun 4th at 5:08pm 2005
I use the "Olive Green" theme that came pre-packaged with Windows XP. It serves the purpose well, but it might not be the prettiest. I am so used to it by now that I see no point of changing to anything else.
At one point in my life, before I turned twenty, I used to mess around with icons and themes all the time. I even customized the Windows startup animation screen, and I had all sorts of custom sounds for each Windows event. This was with Windows 3.1!
Man, that really dates me, doesn't it?

satchmo
member
2077 posts
396 snarkmarks
Registered: Nov 24th 2004
Location: Los Angeles, U.S.
Occupation: pediatrician
"The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." -- Toulouse-Lautre, Moulin Rouge
Re: Windows themes
Posted by Campaignjunkie on Sat Jun 4th at 6:14pm 2005
I always turn off all the advanced graphic feature things (except font
antialiasing), and change the themes back to Windows 2000 style. I
think it's a bit more practical that way.

Campaignjunkie
member
1309 posts
291 snarkmarks
Registered: Feb 12th 2002
Location: West Coast, USA
Occupation: Student
Re: Windows themes
Posted by ReNo on Sat Jun 4th at 7:07pm 2005
The cool thing about litestep is that it really lets you make it as
practical or as fancy as you like. I think I've probably got it setup
to be more productive than standard windows UI's and there is still a
lot of room for improvement.
For example, I mentioned briefly about being able to do scripting and
create commands you can run from your taskbar. An example is being able
to type "? <args>" and have it pop open your browser and search
for your arguments in your search engine of choice, or you can create
specifics such as my "?image <args>" to search for google images,
or "?amazon <args>" to search on amazon. I can just type
"!snarkpit" or "!mapcore" and get to websites without needing to open
my browser or clutter my desktop with links. You can also use it
exactly like the windows "run..." command - type in any address on your
computer and be taken there, execute any program (including non-pathed
ones such as "calc" or "ping"), and do anything you'd normally have to
bring up a cmd window for basically.
Another fairly neat feature I've not quite gotten used to but think
could be handy is the multiple desktop system. This lets you have
several desktops that can be cycled between or selected from the
taskbar, allowing you to, for instance, minimise/restore multiple
things at once.
So yeah, basically having a replacement shell, particularly one as
modular and tweakable as LiteStep, really lets you go crazy with
customising things for your own productivity.

ReNo
member
5457 posts
933 snarkmarks
Registered: Aug 22nd 2001
Location: Scotland
Occupation: Level Designer
Re: Windows themes
Posted by fishy on Sun Jun 5th at 2:55am 2005
i used to enjoy 'themeing' the screens at work. a few years ago, i found out the name of the old 'it is now safe to turn off your computer' file. it was a small bmp but had a .sys extension, so i made a new one in paint that said the computer had encountered a serious error and would explode in 10 seconds. it wouldn't really have been funny if i'd done it on my own computer instead of my managers. worked a treat. and the touch screen pic i made as a desktop background worked pretty well as a dafty magnet.

fishy
member
2623 posts
662 snarkmarks
Registered: Sep 7th 2003
Location: glasgow
i eat paint