metacity-1 / win frame : MacOS like from MeditaranianNight theme (thanx for the support !!!) ...
GTK-2 and GTK-3 rebuild for LinuxMint-14 Nadia + uncludes Unity and Gnome Shell for Ubuntu 12.10 + new xfce with MacOS for Mint-14 xfce

Suitable with my Icon-Pack :
http://gnome-look.org/content/show.php?content=148521
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Packed :
1.metacity-1 / 3 for the frames MacOS like & Win7-like (green-blue type);
2.gtk-2;
3.gtk-3;
4.gnome-shell 3.6;
5.cinnamon 1.6.1 (ready for Nadia);
6.unity 12.10;
7.xfce support;
8.bisoft-cursors
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-2012-
BiSOFT-GTK3 dark Edition - now with MacOS frame, ready for Maya (LinuxMint-13) and fully compatible with Ubuntu 12.04 LTS
many bugs fixed in colors and sizes,
changed the metacity-1 pack to black edition.
Cinnamon 1.4 based on Maya RC (yet) edition ...
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BiSOFT -> Dark Edition for Gnome Shell => BiSOFT-G3d; Updated Cinnamon 1.4
It's inspired by the Mint DarkGlass and my previous theme BiSOFT-G3g :
http://gnome-look.org/content/show.php/BiSOFT-G3G%2C+Win7%2CGreen+Project?content=148985
The new here is the updated Cinnamon-1.4; Gnome-Shell supports GTK-3.2 and I still keep the green line;
included :
1.metacity-1 / 3 for the frames - Win7-like (green-blue type);
2.gtk-2.x;
3.gtk-3.2;
4.gnome-shell;
5.cinnamon 1.4;
6.unity;
7.bisoft-cursors
etc.
Have a nice day ...
Good Luck

Ratings & Comments
2 Comments
there is my problem ^ dude. could you explain me the way please? I'm a newby on this kind of stuff. thanks :)
OK I will try to explain you: 1. COMMON WAY : Switch your filebrowser (Nautilus, Nemo, Thunar, Dolphin, which is your default one) 'View' -> 'show hidden files' = ON to see the hidden directories; on any Linux you may put my theme into directory : /home/{username}/.themes ... where {username} is your name of user during registration. If there is no such directory, you must make it -> run Terminal and type : mkdir ~/.theme don't need to be sudo, but it should be hidden (with {.} before 'themes'); then expand (just double click on my file) the contents of the archive into : /home/{username}/.themes and you are done; now you may change to my theme in the system settings. 2. ADVANCED WAY : First become SuperUser -> type in the Terminal : sudo su - ... type your password ... Do the same things - expand my stuff, but into directory : /usr/share/themes ... it should be already opened; The difference is that now, the theme becomes intergrated into your Linux and is available for any user on your pc, which I definately prefer. Good Luck !!!