This content showcases a highly customized and feature-rich Linux operating system designed for both casual users and power users, emphasizing extensive theming, real-time utilities, and seamless integration of other operating systems.
Mind Map
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This video is not an exhaustive
presentation [music] of every single
feature I've implemented in the
operating system. It's just an overview
of some of the big stuff that is easily
demonstrable in a video. All right, so
these are all the shaders that I have
custom built. I've made sure each one of
these is as fun to [music] use as
anything else. You can quickly toggle
through each one of them from the roy
menu and get a quick live preview of
what they look like before applying
them. So this is a wobbly shader and
there's a lot more where this came from.
You can [music] of course add as many
shaders as you would like by just
placing the shader in the shaders
directory. Those shaders will
Now this is genuinely a game changer of
a shader. You can create one of those
anoglyphs 3D glasses and you'll start
seeing everything [music] in 3D. the
whole experience gets elevated to a
whole different level, especially if
you're consuming a lot of media like
videos and movies and stuff. Now, this
is a pixelated shader. It's obviously
not meant to be daily driven, but I've
left it there for shits and giggles.
These are all my Obsidian notes. They've
all been meticulously organized and
written for you to read. I've formatted
them using the markdown syntax, so they
look beautiful. One of my favorite
things of this entire setup is to be
able to theme every single element of
the UI immediately by just changing your
wallpaper. It generates a color palette
from the wallpaper and themes the UI.
I've got Madagen running as a theme
engine to do the heavy lifting.
If you're interested in the wallpapers I
have, you can go to my GitHub and get
them from there. I've got over 1,000 of
them and every single one was
handpicked. They're all visually
distinct to generate a wide variety of
color palettes for theming the whole UI.
Everything is super fluid. I've
literally [music] spent days fine-tuning
the default animation. It's been
perfected at this point. I [music] think
just the animations alone make the whole
experience of using the operating system
Now, this is another one of those
incredibly useful features. You can
transcribe your voice in real time with
either whisper if you only have a CPU or
with proit.
[music] You should give Linux a try.
This is text to speech with highquality
voices using Kokoro. You have a bunch of
voices to choose from including Santa
and a whole set of other voices. [music]
>> Linux is the best because it gives users
complete control over their systems
without artificial restrictions. It is
transparent, secure [music] and
efficient allowing anyone common in
modify and optimize every all these
features are so frequently used that I
have a keybind [music] set for each and
every one of them. This is another nice
to have feature. It's OCR text
extraction using tesseract. [music] You
can extract text from almost any image
with just a keybind and it's
surprisingly accurate. [music]
I love the ability to zoom in like this
This is a script that I created to
rotate your screen with a keybind.
[music] Um, it's especially useful if
you're browsing social media and come
across a video that was made for phones.
Um, in that case, you could quickly
rotate your screen and have the video
make use of all the available screen
real estate. You can scroll and have a
lot of content be displayed on one page
at the same time. You probably don't
realize how useful it is until you
actually need it. [music]
This app is called blanket [music] and
it's pretty useful to just generate u
constant background noise so you can
focus on the task at hand. And this is
my to-do list. Now, this is another
script I wrote. It's to allow you to
fractionally scale your display [music]
in real time on the fly with a keybind.
It goes as high as 3x and as low as your
native monitor resolution. I love this
wallpaper, by the way.
And then I've got these two way bars
[music] to choose from. Uh that is of
course again toggable with the keybind.
This one is a nerdy one. It's got a lot
of functionality, a lot of features, but
it doesn't look quite as good as the
modern UI. So if you're more
aesthetically inclined, you can choose
[music]
Also, you can quickly switch between
light and dark mode. And this again uses
Madagen under the hood to theme the
entire operating system. Every app will
ensure that it respects your theme.
Since it generates a color palette from
the wallpaper, [music] it draws from a
pool of a large shade of whites. Some
GTK apps require for you to restart the
As is tradition in Linux videos, here's
a rice fast fetch.
Now, on the bottom, I've got on-creen
display for things like caps lock
toggling, brightness control, volume,
and media playback status. [music] And
of course, you guessed it, this also
makes use of the Madagen color palette.
You can quickly use this terminal user
interface to dial in your timeout
settings. [music] I made this so you
don't have to dive into the config files
and be intimidated by the code. I've
designed this OS to appeal to both kinds
of users, [music] people who aren't
really all that technical and also
hardcore Linux enthusiasts. I've written
a script to unify almost every setting
in [music] this one roy. So, you can
change stuff from right within here. And
every last hyperlink keybind along with
what it does is listed in this roy menu.
So, you can learn what combination
[music] of keys is responsible for what.
And these are obviously invocable right
from the roy menu. They will emulate a
combination of key presses to trigger
the functionality.
This is another ropey script that
essentially acts as a front end for
Madagen that allows you to fine-tune and
get a very specific set of colors and
contrast from your wallpaper. This
logout menu, although it does inherit
Madagen colors, it doesn't look as good
as I want it to. So, I'll get to working
on this in the next few days and [music]
getting it to look a lot better than it
does right now. And then I have another
roy script for power menu options. It
also tells you how long the system has
been awake at the top.
I [music] love this app so much. I just
wrote this last week. It produces
high-quality mechanical key sounds
[music] on each key press. And the best
thing of all is that it runs entirely
from RAM, so it's very efficient and
fast. Uh I've also made it so that it
uses a UV virtual environment to not
pollute your system with dependencies.
It's [music] as snappy as it can get
with no latency. And this again can be
toggled either from the roy menu or with
a keybind. And my Spotify that I've got
over here is themed [music] and
configured by Spicify. By default, out
of the box, Spotify will use your imagin
color palette, but you can also have it
look a certain way with Spiceify. Since
this is Linux, all of the apps and
custom scripts that I've written are DRO
[music] agnostic. So, they can easily be
integrated into your existing operating system.
system.
This is Edex UI. This doesn't really do
anything, but it looks pretty cool, so I
You can also practice your typing speed
with an included app called Key Punch.
Now, that's pretty fast, if I may say so myself.
And now we've got MPV player that is
highly customized [music] with live
thumbnail generation for progress bar
scrubbing and navigating. This app in
the background shows you your entire
systems files along with their sizes in
a beautiful visual pie chart.
These are custom sliders that I wrote
for volume control, brightness, and
nightlight. And they caught me off guard
as to how useful they turned out to be.
I find [music] myself using these to
change my settings more than any other
way of doing it because of how
accessible it is with a keybind.
>> That's no worry. as our official burglar
>> So, I've also written around 10
animation presets for you to quickly
toggle between right from the roofing
menu. Some of the presets are just there
for fun. They're intentionally designed
to be exuberant and flamboyant.
This one has an extra punch to it. It's
This is a slow motion preset for all the
sloths out there. I'm not going to go
through every single preset in the
interest of time, but you can select the
one you want based on your preference.
Personally, the default one is pretty
good. It's the best one, but you can
also drop in your own animation config
files in the animation directory, and
they will automatically be indexed and
listed in this menu. If you're one of
those people who find animations
nauseating, you can disable animations
altogether systemwide with a disabled
preset, and everything will just happen instantly.
This is a resource manager that should
be familiar to some of you, particularly
if you've used Windows before. And then
I have another script that quickly
allows you to toggle between uh window
transparency, shadows, and blur. I don't
know if you can tell, but I've designed
this system with a lot of thought and
passion. Also, this entire setup doesn't
use more than 900 megabytes of RAM on
startup. It's designed to be both
lightweight and have a lot of utilities.
If there's something that you think
you're not going to use, things like uh
text to speech, [music] you could choose
to entirely omit during setup. And if
you later decide that you do want that
feature, you can also install it after
the fact by just running the individual
script responsible for setting it up.
The whole setup is automated with
scripts. I understand it's not
everyone's cup of tea to be so granular
in setting up your system. That's why
I've made roofy toggleable menus for everything.
everything.
I also have this high performance
hardware accelerated Android 13 running
directly on the kernel. Using Android
like this is indistinguishable from
using it on a native tablet or on your
phone. It's particularly intuitive if
you have a touchscreen enabled device.
And again, if you think you're not going
to use Android on uh your PC, you can
choose to skip this step entirely during setup.
setup.
Now, this is hands down my favorite
feature. It's to be able to use Windows
on bare metal with GPU pass through and
zero latency right within Linux. So you
can quickly switch [music] back and
forth between your Linux operating
system and if there's something you want
to do within Windows, especially with
apps that require Windows like the Adobe
Creative Suit. Setting up Windows like
this is the only part of the whole
operating system that is not automated
because of how hardware specific it is.
But I do have notes in Obsidian that
delineate the step-by-step process of
setting it up in an easy to follow
manner. I personally installed Windows
10 over Windows 11, but the process is
identical for both. I would highly
recommend going with Windows 10 because
of how resource efficient it is,
relatively speaking, of course, cuz it's
Windows after all. So, someone like
myself who is unfortunately tied into
the Adobe ecosystem, this is a gamecher
of a feature. The entirety of this video
was edited right here within this
virtual environment, and that is just
testament to how smooth and
imperceptible the latency is. The way
that it achieves like you're running
Windows natively on hardware is through
shared memory buffer using Looking
Glass. It works like regular Windows.
You can install anything you want. If
there's a [music] specific game that
requires kernel level anti-che, you
could theoretically use this to play
those games. Games like Fortnite, Call
of Duty, and stuff. Now, the
prerequisite for you to be able to set
this up like this requires you to at
least have two [music] GPUs. So, you can
pass through one of those to the virtual
machine. While it is possible to do it
if you only have one GPU, the setup
process is a lot more complicated and
well beyond the scope of this video. All
right, so that concludes the video. So,
this project took me a lot longer than I
anticipated it would. I first started
out thinking that I would be done with
it in over a week. Um, and I'm still
here, you know, still in development. I
do plan on supporting this on a
long-term basis, and I have a cat that's
kind of distracting right now. He's
right here. I tried to give him an egg,
but he wouldn't eat it.
I think he's going to eat it now. He
just wants pets. He's addicted to these pets.
pets. Oi,
so yeah, if you found this video
interesting or if you even found this
amusing at all, head over to my GitHub
and give it a star as a token of
support. I would appreciate that a lot.
Um because I poured my blood, sweat, and
tears into this project. And uh this is
all I've been thinking for the last uh 8
months. This cat is so distracting. It's
he's trying to get on my lap and
everything. Uh I'm going to wrap this
video up right here. So everything I
showcase in this video is open source on
my GitHub. Uh if you need anything at
all, feel free to uh take it without
attributing any um credit. I don't mind
at all. Uh have a nice one. I'm F and
I'll see you in the next one. Peace out. Wait,
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