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  2. WinCustomize - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinCustomize

    WinCustomize is a website that provides content for users to customize Microsoft Windows. The site hosts thousands of skins, themes, icons, wallpapers, and other graphical content to modify the Windows graphical user interface. There is some premium or paid content, however, the vast majority of the content is free for users to download.

  3. StyleXP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StyleXP

    Pretty much any element of the visual style can be edited. You can change the look of anything from the taskbar, title bars, start menu, progress bars, or control widgets. The sizes of elements can be changed as well. A few of the most popular examples would include thinner taskbars or compact start menus.

  4. Rainmeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainmeter

    Rainmeter skins are written in Rainmeter code using a text editor and stored as INI configuration files. [10] System resource values and other information such as weather or time are stored through "measure" values within a skin, which can then be shown through different kinds of customizable visual elements called "meters".

  5. See-through display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/See-through_display

    An optical combiner for a see-through display. A see-through display or transparent display is an electronic display that allows the user to see what is shown on the screen while still being able to see through it.

  6. Taskbar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taskbar

    Windows 7 removed several classic taskbar features. Windows 11 removed taskbar grouping, possibly to have the functionality to move the taskbar to the left side of the screen, etc., but the old taskbar could be reactivated. [14] Deskbands are minimized functional, long-running programs, such as Windows Media Player. Programs that minimize to ...

  7. KDE Plasma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE_Plasma

    KDE Plasma is a set of graphical shells developed by KDE for Unix-like operating systems. With the KDE brand repositioning in 2009, Plasma 4.4 succeeded KDE 4.3.Currently, it has four workspace variants: one for desktop PCs and laptops (Plasma Desktop) [a], [4] [5] [6] one for TVs (Plasma Bigscreen), [7] one for smartphones (Plasma Mobile), [8] and another for embedded and touch-enabled ...

  8. Transparency and translucency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transparency_and_translucency

    Computer modeling of light transmission through translucent ceramic alumina has shown that microscopic pores trapped near grain boundaries act as primary scattering centers. The volume fraction of porosity had to be reduced below 1% for high-quality optical transmission (99.99 percent of theoretical density).

  9. Google Desktop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Desktop

    Google Desktop was a computer program with desktop search capabilities, created by Google for Linux, Apple Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows systems. It allowed text searches of a user's email messages, computer files, music, photos, chats, web pages viewed, and the ability to display "Google Gadgets" on the user's desktop in a sidebar.