Encyclopedia > Desktop environment

  Article Content

Desktop environment

A Desktop environment is a complete graphical user interface (GUI) solution. It provides icons, toolbars, applications, applets, and abilities like drag&drop. As a whole, the particularities of design and function of a desktop environment endow it with distinctive look and feel[?].

The term really only makes sense in the context of systems running the X Window System and/or UNIX, systems which have a GUI, but which may not have all the modern features mentioned above. One way to think of a desktop environment is as a set of tools that make UNIX and X act like the GUIs of Microsoft Windows or Apple Macintosh.

Well-known examples include GNOME, KDE, CDE and XFce; however, there are also a number of other desktop environments, including but not limited to EDE, UDE[?], ROX Desktop[?], GEM[?], PerlTop[?], XPde[?] and arm0nia[?].

Some window managers also include elements reminiscient of those found in desktop environments; the most prominent example for this is Enlightenment.

See also

External Links

  • CDE (http://www.opengroup.org/cde/)
  • GNOME (http://www.gnome.org/)
  • KDE (http://www.kde.org/)
  • XFce (http://www.xfce.org/)
  • ROX Desktop (http://rox.sourceforge.net/)
  • UDE (http://udeproject.sourceforge.net/)
  • EDE (http://ede.sourceforge.net/)
  • GEM (http://www.deltasoft.com/)
  • PerlTop (http://perltop.sourceforge.net/)
  • XPde (http://www.xpde.com/)
  • arm0nia (http://arm0nia.org/)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Bullying

... it did not always have inherently negative implications, it merely designated anyone who assumed power for any period of time without a legitimate basis of authority. The ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 28.6 ms