- MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 HOW TO
- MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 INSTALL
- MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 DOWNLOAD
- MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 WINDOWS
The downside is that the other themes also make a few other parts of the UI transparent, while this one doesn’t.
MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 INSTALL
Install and Apply Breeze Transparent, Breeze Transparent with Antu icons or Breeze transparent panel which I am using because it makes the top panel more transparent than the others. To change that, go to System Settings > Workspace Theme > Desktop Theme and click on Get New Theme. Not to mention any apps you open must look completely off with the default KDE theme.
MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 DOWNLOAD
You can download the ones linked below if you’re having trouble finding them.Įxtract the files and place the extracted folders in ~/.local/share/icons/ macOS Themes for KDE Plasmaīy now your desktop must look like Mac but the menu bar is still quite white which is not how it looks on the Mac.
There are so many MacOS icon packs and cursor themes for Linux that you can download and install and any of those will work fine. Select Themes, then drag and drop the downloaded file to where it says …or drag and drop a theme package here: then click on Apply. To install the theme on Cairo dock, right-click anywhere on the dock and select Cairo > Configure. I’m using Cairo dock with a Mac theme (credit: sean barman). You can use either you want, but you will need Mac themes for either one before it starts to look anything like the one in the screenshot above. Linux has many options such as Docky, Plank, and my favorite Cairo.
MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 WINDOWS
The dock is not that hard to replicate though and can even be done on Windows with quite a perfection. The other quite popular component of a Mac desktop is the dock at the bottom that houses all your favorite and currently open apps. To do that click on the hamburger menu on the bottom panel, select More Settings… > Remove Panel. When you’re done, you might want to remove the bottom panel because you won’t be needing that.
MAKE UBUNTU LOOK LIKE MAC OS 7 HOW TO
Unfortunately, I can’t show you how to space them but you’ll probably figure out how far or close you like those two on your own. On the very left of the panel, add an Active Window Control Widget (might have to download it), next to it add the Global Menu widget. I’ve added Pager in order to easily switch between different virtual desktops, a trash widget, and a Netspeed widget as well but you can ignore those.
The system tray widget contains all the necessary icons which will appear when needed as it happens on Windows.
You can use the bottom panel as a guide or the screenshot above if you’re not sure which widgets to place. Do the same with the clock widget and add anything you want really.