@capngloval

I cannot find the site, but I had downloaded all the themes ages ago. The compressed tarball is a bit less than 1 meg, so I put it on sdf. You can get them by issuing:

curl 'gopher://sdf.org/0/users/jmccue/repository/gkrellm_themes.tar.gz' > gkrellm_themes.tar.gz

To get the signature:

curl 'gopher://sdf.org/0/users/jmccue/repository/gkrellm_themes.tar.gz.asc' > gkrellm_themes.tar.gz.asc

#gkrellm

Glad to see #gkrellm still being maintained!

I noticed in #slackware current gkrellm was upgraded to the new version.

So, with me being on #slackware 15.0, I grabbed the current source for the new gkrellm from slackware.osuosl.org.

I compiled and upgraded it and the new version runs great on #slackware 15.0

@rl_dane

GKrellm is a vital tool here. Even when I'm on win64 running a simulation, I have it on a secondary display

#GKrellm #dashboard #OpenSource

#gkrellm doesn't get enough love — #microblogging #MicroToot: 32 characters

What system monitor program are people using on their #Linux machines these days?

I'm still using #gkrellm because it has a nice graphical configuration tool. What about everyone else?

Today I give thanks to the programmers and coders of gkrellm. This nifty panel program works flawlessly, even on Wayland display servers.

Gkrellm was born way before Wayland was even an idea

It seems trivial to spawn properly on an Xorg session over ssh, but a program like pavucontrol erroneously spawns itself on the local display of the machine instead of the remote display, when invoked in an xsession. A bug which I need to report and will of course be squashed by those coders.

Gkrellm even keeps different configurations when spawned from different machines. Gkrellm is a trusted valuable tool, which uses a minimum amount of network resources meaning that you can even run it over the Internet when you have a metered connection

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GKrellM?wprov=sfla1

#gkrellm #dashboard #system #network #monitoring #Thankful

GKrellM - Wikipedia

@essjayjay

#gkrellm is sweet!!! I used it every day circa 2000! ;)

And I absolutely love the fact that it's still usable today.

If someone thinks that a program has to be massively re-written every couple years with brand new frameworks/toolkits, or whatever the flarg, I'd really, passionately like to invite them to snort a raw egg at this very moment!! XD

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

https://video.hardlimit.com/w/w6LX9zaw148UDnE9yRkTvT

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

PeerTube

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

https://squeet.me/display/962c3e10-364f6c89-47f5e0a69d8fd51e

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

GKrellM logo featuring the text "Open Source System Monitor" with a turquoise background and a detailed system stats display on the right. GKrellM is a singl...

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

GKrellM is a single process stack of system monitors which supports applying themes to match its appearance to your window manager, GTK, or any other theme. It could be seen a GUI equivalent to Conky.

It is easy to configure and runs well on Linu ...continues

See https://gadgeteer.co.za/gkrellm-a-cross-platform-open-source-system-monitor/

#GKrellM #opensource #systemmonitors #technology

GKrellM: A Cross-Platform Open Source System Monitor

GKrellM is a single process stack of system monitors which supports applying themes to match its appearance to your window manager, GTK, or any other theme.

GadgeteerZA