I have a somewhat long computation running in the background. I would like the Mathematica icon on the taskbar to flash once the computation is done. For example, Microsoft Outlook reminders make the taskbar flash:

How can I achieve the same effect in Mathematica? Is there a Mathematica command that makes the Mathematica icon in the taskbar flash?
What I've tried: Beep[] can be useful, but if you leave the computer for a while, you can miss the beep. The advantage of flashing is that it remains flashing indefinitely. Another alternative is MessageDialog[], but you have no way of knowing that a message is up if Mathematica is minimized. It would be useful if MessageDialog[] produced the flashing in the taskbar, but that doesn't happen.
Update: Opening a SystemDialogInput is a hammer type of solution, although it gets the job done. I am reopening this question in case someone else comes up with something more subtle. The goal is to have some sort of alert that doesn't stop (like a beep would), so that if I leave the computer, when I return I could instantly see if the computation is done.
By the way, I am on Linux Mint, in case someone wants to get really low level :)
Beep[]at the end of code if it will take long time to compute. – mmjang Jan 14 '14 at 16:20Beep[]is that if you leave the computer for a while and return, and you can miss the beep. The icon flashing remains flashing indefinitely. – a06e Jan 14 '14 at 16:25Beep[]) that makes the taskbar flash. – a06e Jan 14 '14 at 16:58SystemDialogInput["FileSave"]makes the Dock icon bounce. Perhaps under Windows it will flash the Taskbar icon? – MikeLimaOscar Jan 14 '14 at 17:06SystemDialogInput["FileSave"]makes the taskbar icon flash. But it also brings up a File Save dialog that can be confusing. I guess I can use it temporarily. But it would be nice if there was a command that made the taskbar flash without side effects. – a06e Jan 14 '14 at 18:30