Difference between revisions of "Worker - An Introduction"

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This is a part of what I really love about Worker. You can make Worker do what you want it to do & not have to put up with having to do things the way someone else wants you to do it.
This is a part of what I really love about Worker. You can make Worker do what you want it to do & not have to put up with having to do things the way someone else wants you to do it.


This is all fine & good, unless you are someone who loves working with windows & icons. Under those circumstances you would find Worker to be just exactly what you don't want (you may even think that Worker is prehistoric).
This is all fine & good, unless you are someone who loves working with windows & icons. Under those circumstances you would find Worker to be just exactly what you don't want (you may even think that Worker is pre-historic).


For me Worker is perfect.  After all these years of using Worker, I'm still finding things that I can do with Worker to make it suit me even better (that's apart from the changes I may make from time to time with different programs that I call from the buttons).
For me Worker is perfect.  After all these years of using Worker, I'm still finding things that I can do with Worker to make it suit me even better (that's apart from my swapping an application that I call from Worker to do whatever, for another that has similar capabilities).


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==Back up your ~/.worker/config & use it elsewhere==
==Backup your ~/.worker/config & use it elsewhere==


You can save your custom ~/.worker/config file ''(it is a '''REALLY''' good idea to keep a backup of this file)'' you can transfer it to other installations of Linux (it can run on OS/X too, but it is messy to get it functioning there). You can edit the ~/.worker/config file directly with a text editor, which can be useful sometimes.
You can save your custom ~/.worker/config file ''(it is a '''REALLY''' good idea to keep a backup of this file)''. Apart from saving your configuration from being lost to corruption or whatever, you can transfer your ~/.worker/config file to other installations of Linux (it can run on OS/X too, but it is messy to get it functioning there). You can also edit the ~/.worker/config file directly with a text editor, which can be useful sometimes.


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=Making Worker work how you want it to=
=Making Worker work how you want it to=


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