mira estoooooooooo
al final del todo pone kicker , osea el panel de kdeeeee
podriamos llamarlo en etc/xdg con un script....
8.1 Panels
The following are some panels that are popular with Openbox users:
Pypanel: A very minimalistic panel, that is light and quite configurable. Supports launchers, a system tray, a clock with time and/or date, and a workspace indicator. I give some tips on what to do with Pypanel in this post.
Fbpanel: A light panel with many plug-ins (pagers, task bar, menu, clock, etc.) that follows your Gtk theme and supports transparency. You can run two panels at the same time (top & bottom), Gnome-style.
Lxpanel: A light panel with all the things that normally come with a panel. Lxpanel is similar to fbpanel, but easier to configure. It is part of the the LXDE project.
Perlpanel: As the name suggests, perlpanel is written in perl. It is heavier on resources than the above mentioned panels, but has a lot of extensions that can be loaded.
BMpanel: A lightweight panel with a taskbar, system tray, desktop switcher and a clock. The panel is themeable. It is based on fspanel, which is no longer developed.
Barpanel: A themeable panel with lots of plugins and nice menus. It is a continuation of Foopanel. I’ve had some issues with this panel (it only showed up on one workspace), but others seemed to have had more luck with it.
Xfce4-panel: The panel that is used in Xfce. Everything will work in Openbox, including all the applets (clocks, pagers, launchers, etc.), except for the power options (shut down, restart, etc.).
Gnome-panel:The panel that is used in Gnome. Everything will work in Openbox, including all the applets (clocks, pagers, launchers, etc.), except for the power options (shut down, restart, etc.).
Kicker: The panel that is used in KDE. Everything will work in Openbox, including all the applets (clocks, pagers, launchers, etc.), except for the power options (shut down, restart, etc.).