LXDE, the New Lightweight Linux Desktop

LXDE (the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment) is new to the Linux desktop scene, having been launched in 2006. It aims to provide a fully-functional desktop environment whilst being as lightweight as possible, to both speed up your desktop and reduce its environmental impact (by using less CPU and RAM). A quick-and-dirty benchmark courtesy of the LXDE edition of Linux Mint indicates that it measures up pretty well on speed and RAM usage. In the third of my series on desktop alternatives, I took a look at it to see how it shapes up from the user's point of view.
First impressions
To get LXDE, install the lxde package on Debian or Ubuntu, (it's also available via the package manager on Fedora). On first logging into it, it started up noticably faster than Xfce, and I liked the default graphics. There's a single menu bar, at the bottom, with a menu, a couple of default application buttons (file manager, terminal window, web browser), and a neat button which either iconifies all the windows (left-click) or collapses them into their top bars (middle-click). On the right-hand side of the bar, LXDE shows off its energy-saving credentials with a CPU monitor alongside screen lock, powerdown button, and clock.
Strictly speaking LXDE isn't a window manager but a desktop environment
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