Post 9tttt218YM9nMLchc0 by hund@linuxrocks.online
(DIR) More posts by hund@linuxrocks.online
(DIR) Post #9tttt0vQc5zpyLwd4i by EmeraldArcher@linuxrocks.online
2020-04-09T16:22:55Z
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Do any of you use tiling window managers? I'm on a 14 in laptop most of the time and at times it would be nice. Example when I'm watching a video and working on terminal but other than that I can't see why I would need it.
(DIR) Post #9tttt1UsUILvkIWwKW by friend@linuxrocks.online
2020-04-09T17:20:18Z
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@EmeraldArcherWith small laptop, you often want just one or two windows on-screen anyways, so tiling beyond the basic vertical split is rarely useful.Also, most tiling window managers are so minimalistic that they don't manage WiFi, screen brightness, battery and so on.But I actually use a setup with tiling that's quite optimized for small laptops.My setup uses KDE with the KWin Script "Kröhnkite", but the basic workflow should work with any tiler.Bspwm also perpetuates this workflow.
(DIR) Post #9tttt218YM9nMLchc0 by hund@linuxrocks.online
2020-04-10T07:30:14Z
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@friend @EmeraldArcher Tiling beyond the basics? No offense, it looks like you know nothing about tiling window managers, so please think twice before you say anything bad about it.Also. What are you talking about? A window manager does one thing; it manages windows. If you want to manage you wireless network you need a wireless network tool for that and so on.
(DIR) Post #9tttt2mzgQRDkm0vCq by brian@ap.tiuxo.com
2020-04-10T12:33:12.592936Z
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@hund @friend @EmeraldArcher probably should have left the whole first clause off that lolAnyway, awesomewm best wm (unless you need Wayland for some cursed reason)