On  the other   hand,   it  means   that    if  you prefer  the GNOME   file    manager
(Nautilus)  over    the one included    with    Xfce    (Thunar),   you can just    install
Nautilus    and use it  side-by-side    with    Thunar  or  remove  Thunar  completely.
This    is  a   huge    part    of  what    makes   Xfce    so  lightweight that    it  has very    few
dependency  requirements    and is  highly  flexible.
Originally, Xubuntu (Figure 7.2)    was designed    to  create  a   lighter-weight
version of  Ubuntu  that    would   run well    on  older   hardware    because of  the
lighter code    dependencies    of  Xfce.   Over    time,   some    people  discovered  that
they    liked   the desktop environment for other   reasons,    and the older   hardware
use case    became  less    of  a   focus.  It  was the modularity  of  Xfce    combined    with
a   smoothness  of  operation   that    won people  over,   and the distribution    began   to
take    some    of  the favored bits    from    Ubuntu’s    customized  version of  GNOME
and added   them    to  Xfce    to  replace some    of  its defaults.   What    we  have    today
is  a   nice    amalgamation    of  Ubuntu  GNOME   bits,   Xfce    bits,   and a   few other
things  not included    by  default in  either.
FIGURE 7.2 The Xubuntu desktop.
Xubuntu still   uses    less    memory  and fewer   CPU cycles  than    a   standard    Ubuntu
or  Kubuntu install;    however,    thinking    of  it  only    in  those   terms   doesn’t do  it
justice.    To  install Xubuntu with    the Xfce    desktop environment,    install the
xubuntu-desktop package.
