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Making Ubuntu Look Like Windows 7

DeviceGuru writes "Although it won't help Linux run Windows-specific software applications, this easy hack produces an Ubuntu desktop that looks and feels a lot like Windows 7. It's particularly suitable for reviving older PCs or laptops on which the main activities will be web-browsing, email, document writing, and streaming music and videos from from the web. The process installs a Windows 7-like GNOME theme on an otherwise standard Ubuntu 10.04 installation, although it might work on other Linux distros with GNOME and appropriate other packages installed. Naturally all this begs the question: why would anybody want to do this? Why indeed!" People have been doing this sort of look-and-feel swap-out for years; it seems best to me as a practical joke.

37 of 473 comments (clear)

  1. Dual boot... by PmanAce · · Score: 3, Funny

    So one one partition, boot Ubuntu that looks like Windows 7, and on the other partion, boot Windows with an Ubuntu theme? Ah, those would be the days...

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    Tired of my customary (Score:1)
  2. I see you are running Windows 7... by swanzilla · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...Gnome I'm not.

    1. Re:I see you are running Windows 7... by Neil+Watson · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mmm Kay

  3. I don't get it by zill · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why couldn't they just switch back to the default theme?

  4. idea 105 anyone? by linhares · · Score: 3, Interesting
    export look and feel anyone?

    I think a more interesting thing here would be to share desktops in (hopefully) a one-click magical and revolutionary solution. Idea 105's time has come.

  5. Transitions by sv_libertarian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One problem I've had with showing some people (especially older folks, or folks who are very set in their ways) a linux desktop is that they get bogged down fairly quick when they see something that doesn't look "right." Having a Windows-esque desktop could be helpful in transitioning people over.

  6. Re:Well... by techcodie · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, I sort of like it. My friend, and her 4 year old can now both use her windows 7 machine, or my linux machine equally as easy. Win - win.

    --
    last minute desperate solutions to impossible problems created by other fucking people.
  7. "But look! You can make it look like Windows 7!" by Em+Emalb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Why wouldn't I just use Windows 7 then?"

    --
    Sent from your iPad.
  8. Re:begs the question by zill · · Score: 4, Informative

    The "improper" way is so widespread it has become acceptable usage now, perhaps even the standard usage.

  9. The best part is by Culture20 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The window buttons are on the top right again. Yay!

  10. Coming up: by Thraxy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Next week we feature: Make your Ferrari look like a Ford Escort.

    1. Re:Coming up: by SleazyRidr · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think you missed the joke in the most complete way possible.

  11. Put it in a library or lobby by odin84gk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The end user just needs to Feel comfortable. Once a user gets into a web browser, they don't really care about the OS. Something like this would be great for hotel lobbies (with free internet), libraries, and other public access sites.

    My wife (a linux hater) used it in a hotel lobby to print out some airline tickets. She had no idea it was Linux, but I noticed the differences. She had a great experience (managed to get her items printed out without an issue), and just assumed it was a windows machine.

    Her view of the hotel improved because of a simple amenity that helped her out. The hotel had a PC without a costly OS, saving them money. I can easily see the value in something like this.

  12. Re:If the only way... by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wait...we're still doing that one?

  13. Re:"But look! You can make it look like Windows 7! by linhares · · Score: 4, Funny

    for a hundred bucks I'll answer your question

  14. Oh for the love of Linus... by supersloshy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ubuntu is not Linux. Ubuntu is not GNOME. This is not Ubuntu specific and it should not be posted as such.

    Also, scripts like this have existed for months and even years. I remember a recent story about getting GNOME to look like Windows XP as well. Exactly how is this news, and even if it is news, how is it Slashdot-worthy?

    It's particularly suitable for reviving older PCs or laptops on which the main activities will be web-browsing, email, document writing, and streaming music and videos from from the web.

    Exactly how is Windows more usable than GNOME? Yes, more people are used to Windows than GNOME and GNOME-based operating systems, but I find GNOME to be much, much, much more usable than Windows has ever been to me for various reasons. Also, how exactly do these activities benefit from a windows-like visual environment? They're just as easy to do in vanilla GNOME (if not easier) compared to Windows. As the great Wikipedia has often said, [citation needed], and I'm saying this to the original article, not the poster himself.

    --
    "Our country is not nearly so overrun with the bigoted as it is overrun with the broadminded." -Archbishop Fulton Sheen
  15. Dock by steveha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The basic idea of a theme isn't new. A friend of mine had an XP theme on his desktop, and had a guest at his home using his computer for over half an hour without noticing anything. He asked "Do you find my Linux computer easy to use?" and the guest hadn't even realized it wasn't Windows XP.

    That sort of thing is mainly useful as evidence to counter the idea that a Linux desktop is "hard to use".

    The major new thing with Windows 7 is its dock. I have never much been interested in docks but it seems like they are popular. Do you use a dock in Linux? If so, could you please answer these questions:

    0) Which dock do you use?

    1) Why do you prefer your dock to others you have tried?

    2) Is your dock similar to the one in Windows 7?

    I know someone who uses Gnome Do and Docky, so I'm interested in those, but I know there are others around.

    steveha

    --
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  16. I am amazed that this was approved as an article. by ourcraft · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Move to linux if you like freedom and privacy, don't if you don't. But "it looks like windows" ???? sheesh, how 1995 can you get.

  17. look and feel of ubuntu? by macbeth66 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is there something that I can load on a Windows box that will make it look like Ubuntu?

  18. Re:begs the question by zill · · Score: 4, Informative
  19. Re:begs the question by MozeeToby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That seems pretty contradictory to me. If someone raises a question, they are inviting you to think about the possible answers. If someone begs the question, they are trying to get you to assume the answer that supports your argument. It might be possible to raise the question and then assume the answer, but to me those are two separate actions not something you can do in a single statement.

  20. Re:Why use a sub-standard Desktop? by war4peace · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Roughly 2% of computer users might agree with you. The others don't.
    OK, I just threw in some numbers, but the reality remains: a much larger percentage of people prefer Windows-like Desktop Manager looks over the (wide area of) available Linux Desktop manager(s).
    Question is: Why?
    If you simply go ahead and say "Because they don't know any better" - then you already lost the war with Windows. For years and years, the Linux community members have assumed that Average Joes are simply mis- and uninformed about the alternative. Not once did they take into consideration that maybe, and I say maybe Windows Desktop manager simply looks better. More polish, better paint, nicer fonts (oh yes, that again!), ease of use, perhaps a mix of all the above, can't really say. But it works. It's something that people got accustomed to, and if you want them to switch, then you need to offer them similar appearance , at least.
    Out of all this pile of computer users, a very low percentage are technical enough or interested enough to care about the Linux Window Manager's superiority. Roughly, they don't give a rat's ass on that. They don't want more efficient guts, they want the pretty. And Linux window managers rarely provide "the pretty" - they provide the "not unbearably ugly" interface instead.
    Tell you what. Get a few screenshots of default desktops that appear right after an OS finishes installing. Say, for Windows 7, Vista, XP, 2000, Ubuntu, RHEL, Slackware, Debian, MacOS X, Solaris, etc., etc. and make a webpage where people can sort them in order (drag and drop would rule!) from most attractive to least attractive. Ithink we all expect no surprises in what would be on top of the preferences.
    Now getting back to your comment, you mentioned usability, speed and features. They are important. To you and a very small community (weighted in size against the mass of regular users). They don't matter AT ALL to anyone else. What matters to them is design. That's exactly why Apple products sell like... well, Apple products :)
    I'd say a Windows 7-like interface will only bring advantages to Linux. Maybe convince some undecided people to switch? Maybe convince me to use my now retired secondary desktop for basic tasks (browsing, music, movies) and give my gaming rig a rest every now and then?

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  21. Acting "wrong" worse than looking "wrong" ... by perpenso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One problem I've had with showing some people (especially older folks, or folks who are very set in their ways) a linux desktop is that they get bogged down fairly quick when they see something that doesn't look "right." Having a Windows-esque desktop could be helpful in transitioning people over.

    I'm not sure. Once they get past the initial superficial impression of "looking right" they may quickly fall into this "acts wrong". Acting wrong is probably a greater negative than looking wrong. Especially since the words "right" and "wrong" are being overloaded here. Looking wrong is more synonymous with looking different but acting wrong is more synonymous with being defective.

    There is also a "false advertising" aspect, the look gave the expectation of certain behavior. With a different look the different behavior is far more acceptable.

  22. Ugh by mewsenews · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After reading Slashdot for a decade I've finally got Linux on my home desktop and I'm very happy with it, I have it playing my movies and songs, interfacing with my iPhone, and playing World of Warcraft under Wine and connecting to Ventrilo with Mangler. I just installed a native version of Google Chrome a couple of days ago! None of this requiring text editing, and I got a default desktop that looks very pretty with the nVidia proprietary drivers. I'm running legal when there was no way I was going to pay for a Windows retail package.

    So.. 2010 is my year of the Linux desktop, and someone is saying "hey here's how to hose your system so that it looks like Microsoft fucked a penguin". I'll pass on that one..

    On the other hand, if anyone wants to point me to how to move the minimize/maximize/close buttons to the top right hand side of windows I'd appreciate it

  23. Re:begs the question by Hatta · · Score: 3, Interesting

    for example, there was a time when a foregone conclusion was one that was so unlikely you may as well not think about it

    When was that? AFAIK, "Foregone conclusion" comes from Othello, where it means not "unlikely conclusion" but a conclusion that already happened. Not quite the modern sense of "predetermined conclusion", but pretty close.

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    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  24. Re:begs the question by Critical+Facilities · · Score: 5, Funny

    The other day I had a huge argument over the use of the phrase: "if I do say so myself".

    You must be a delight at parties.

  25. Re:"But look! You can make it look like Windows 7! by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 4, Informative

    Then use Services for Unix or PowerShell. Problem solved 11 years and 6 years ago respectively.

  26. Re:begs the question by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The fact that this argument keeps coming up is proof that it's not an acceptable usage now. I sure as hell don't accept it. The phrase "begs the question" is more useful as a logical fallacy than it is as a synonym for "raises the question". That's the only argument that matters.

    Did you even read the pages you linked to? I'll quote (emphasis mine):

    More recently, "to beg the question" has been used by some to mean the same as "to raise the question": for example, "This year's budget deficit is half a trillion dollars. This begs the question- how are we ever going to balance the budget?" Using the term in this way has been deemed to be incorrect by usage commentators

    2. to invite the (following) question. (This reinterpretation of beg the question is incorrect but is currently in widespread use.)

    The sense "raise or prompt a question" came about by misunderstanding of the meaning of the expression, possibly by confusion with beg to differ, and is proscribed (denounced) by some usage guides.

    In any case, whether the improper use of the phrase is more common than the proper use of the phrase is irrelevant. That just means ignorance is widespread.

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  27. Re:begs the question by clone53421 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It was circular, in a sense. Look at the following:

    [T]his easy hack produces an Ubuntu desktop that looks and feels a lot like Windows 7. It’s particularly suitable for reviving older PCs or laptops on which the main activities will be web-browsing, email, document writing, and streaming music and videos from Pandora, YouTube, and elsewhere on the web.

    The claim in bold is only a true claim if you already wanted the UI of your system to look like Windows 7, but it is given as a justification of the implication (made by the non-bolded statement) that you’d want your Ubuntu desktop to look like Windows 7.

    Maybe the circular reasoning would be clearer if it was written like this:

    This easy hack produces an Ubuntu desktop that looks and feels a lot like Windows 7. Now – “Why would anyone want to make a Ubuntu desktop look like Windows 7?”, you might ask. Well, Ubuntu is particularly suitable for reviving older PCs or laptops on which the main activities will be web-browsing, email, document writing, and streaming music and videos from Pandora, YouTube, and elsewhere on the web, and if you did decide to install Ubuntu you’d obviously want it to look like Windows 7.

    --
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  28. Contronyms by tepples · · Score: 3, Interesting

    it's pretty frustrating when there are two meanings for a phrase and the meanings are contradictory.

    You mean like "cleave" and other contronyms?

  29. Re:begs the question by quickgold192 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Well that's between you and a doctor, or a consenting adult.

  30. Re:Why use a sub-standard Desktop? by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Roughly 2% of computer users might agree with you. The others don't.
    OK, I just threw in some numbers, but the reality remains: a much larger percentage of people prefer Windows-like Desktop Manager looks over the (wide area of) available Linux Desktop manager(s).

    Popularity has nothing to do with quality. For instance, McDonalds, Taylor Swift, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

    If you simply go ahead and say "Because they don't know any better" - then you already lost the war with Windows.

    There is no war with Windows. The only goal is to make the best operating system possible.

    Not once did they take into consideration that maybe, and I say maybe Windows Desktop manager simply looks better. More polish, better paint, nicer fonts (oh yes, that again!), ease of use, perhaps a mix of all the above, can't really say.

    Sure they did. Which is why they created Compiz. It's also why every window manager or desktop environment out there has extensive theming abilities. Compare W7 to something like this, Enlightenment wins hands down.

    Out of all this pile of computer users, a very low percentage are technical enough or interested enough to care about the Linux Window Manager's superiority. Roughly, they don't give a rat's ass on that.

    There's a phrase for this, "casting pearls before swine".

    And Linux window managers rarely provide "the pretty" - they provide the "not unbearably ugly" interface instead.

    That's simply not the case. I've had numerous comments, from artsy female types even, about how nice my Cthulhain themed Fluxbox desktop looks. Now they'd never be able to use it, but it's certainly not ugly.

    Tell you what. Get a few screenshots of default desktops that appear right after an OS finishes installing. Say, for Windows 7, Vista, XP, 2000, Ubuntu, RHEL, Slackware, Debian, MacOS X, Solaris, etc., etc

    Sure, if you compare mostly server distros to desktop windows you'll see the trend you expect. Throw in stuff like Mint, or Ubuntu Studio, and you'll see different results.

    I'd say a Windows 7-like interface will only bring advantages to Linux. Maybe convince some undecided people to switch? Maybe convince me to use my now retired secondary desktop for basic tasks (browsing, music, movies) and give my gaming rig a rest every now and then?

    If it looks like Windows but can't run Windows apps, it's just a crappy crippled version of Windows. If it looks different from Windows, then people start getting interested. Showing off the advanced theming and other window manager functions (virtual desktops) is a great way of getting people interested in trying something different.

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  31. Re:Why use a sub-standard Desktop? by war4peace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Popularity has nothing to do with quality. For instance, McDonalds, Taylor Swift, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

    Um, I have no idea who Taylor Swift is, and I heard of Jay leno. Never watched his shows.
    You seem to make a confusion between what's popular in the US and what's globally popular. But I got your idea. However, again you seem to misunderstand the difference between quality that makes you think and quality that makes life easy.
    Either you are in the business to make tools for smart, tech-savvy people (see Linux) or you are in the business for the general population (See Microsoft). Depends how do you want to measure success, I guess.

    Compare W7 to something like this, Enlightenment wins hands down.

    That thing is ugly as hell.
    1. Fonts are ugly.
    2. Windows title bar text is almost unreadable.
    3. Top-left window: has 2 panes instead of tabs.
    4. Middle Window: why on Earth would you care what the HDDs full names are? Why would you put the Temp folder as Favorite?
    5. All windows: the menu button and the close/maximize/minimze buttons are reversed, compared to Windows. This is a major issue for a Windows user who is interested in switching.
    6. The gizmo on the lower right side looks like a patch of some sort and the text on it is barely readable.
    7. I don't care about desktops depictions/thumbnails on the left, I only care where my open programs are. A list of open programs (similar to Windows Taskbar) is a lot more helpful then going through 6 desktops in my quest for the "You-Name-It" program that I remember to have had open somewhere.

    All of these in just one screenshot. And I looked at it for like 2 minutes.

    Tell you what. Get a few screenshots of default desktops that appear right after an OS finishes installing. Say, for Windows 7, Vista, XP, 2000, Ubuntu, RHEL, Slackware, Debian, MacOS X, Solaris, etc., etc

    Sure, if you compare mostly server distros to desktop windows you'll see the trend you expect. Throw in stuff like Mint, or Ubuntu Studio, and you'll see different results.

    You pick anything you'd like, man, I just threw some random examples. :)

    If it looks like Windows but can't run Windows apps, it's just a crappy crippled version of Windows. If it looks different from Windows, then people start getting interested. Showing off the advanced theming and other window manager functions (virtual desktops) is a great way of getting people interested in trying something different.

    I bloody hate Virtual Desktops. Why do they even exist? I'm serious... I don't get it. What's their advantage?

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  32. Re:begs the question by aoteoroa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which begs the question...what is an "improper" use? Does it cease to be "improper" once it has become ubiquitous?

    It probably depends on the audience. I appreciate good grammar when I hear or read it, and expect it from journalists and formal writers. There are definitely people who will judge you as an uneducated hick for using too much slang but sometimes in casual conversation using proper grammar just makes a person sound like a pompous ass.

  33. Re:Why use a sub-standard Desktop? by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

    > I bloody hate Virtual Desktops. Why do they even exist? I'm serious... I don't get it. What's their advantage?

    You can use them to organize desktop clutter, like any other desktop container.

    You don't need a 2nd and 3rd monitor just to have things sorted and nicely laid out and handy.

    If you do anything but use your machine as an xbox or a web kiosk, the extra real estate and organization is very handy.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  34. Re:begs the question by stormguard2099 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So by your logic I should refer to my monitor as my computer? I mean if widespread usage dictates meaning then that would in fact be acceptable, perhaps even the standard usage

    --
    http://greenobyl.com/ please.... think of the children!!
  35. Re:Microsoft usability research by gweihir · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But, they do spend a lot of time and money on usability testing.
    Yes, it's not perfect, but it's not just a bunch of morons throwing crap on the screen either.
    I remember seeing the presentation they posted on the development of the ribbon. Seems like smart people doing reasonable things.

    Well, what I don't get is why they are having so bad usability despite all this testing? The ribbon is really an awful idea. I cannot find anything there plus it takes far too much precious vertical screen area. I also know that basically all our customers (a lot and very IT savvy people) use pre-ribbon Office.

    Then there is the fact that win7 does not have virtual screens. I find that I am not happy with at least a 3x2 grid of them and usually use 3x3. Is this why some people doing development work on Windows want two monitors? They would not nearly be enough for me. And with edge-scroll (fvwm has had this 20 years ago) it is actually faster to switch virtual desktops than turn your head.

    There are other things, like no icon boxes, hard to customize menus and the like.

    I guess, I am just not in their target group, possibly because I have not only seen how to do it better, but also used something better for more than 20 years.

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