
I had heard of wmi before but you post has prompted me to give it a go. So I dutifully edit my ~/.xinitrc and head off into the world of wmi.rhadar wrote: if you like wms like ion i have heard of a new wm which is called wmi (window manager improved) it takes the best of all the minimal window managers (therefore it pretty much imitates everything ion has but lua scripting). it intends to be the vim of window managers and has input and interactive modes like vim. however it is ugly as well
unfortunately no ebuild exists last time i checked but it shouldnt be a problem writing one.
its address is
http://www.wm-i.org/
Way ahead of you there, I already have a printout sitting next to me on my desk.rhadar wrote:anyway if you want to understand the basics of wmi check the getting started tutorial on the left frame of its homepage.
Is that "Bitstream Vera Sans Mono" you're using as the terminal font?orochi wrote:ion looks ugly?
I rather like how it looks. having all my programs neatly, and automatically tiled with no waste of space just feels clean to me
heres a screen shot
http://www.deviantart.com/view/2772169/

What X11 terminal did you use on that screenshot?orochi wrote:ion looks ugly?
I rather like how it looks. having all my programs neatly, and automatically tiled with no waste of space just feels clean to me
heres a screen shot
http://www.deviantart.com/view/2772169/
i agree - especially the lack of wasted space is a pro.orochi wrote:ion looks ugly?
I rather like how it looks. having all my programs neatly, and automatically tiled with no waste of space just feels clean to me
heres a screen shot
http://www.deviantart.com/view/2772169/
What are you using? The plain console or with framebuffer?drownd wrote:Why even bother with X ?
You're right that does look smooth!orochi wrote:heres a screen shot
http://www.deviantart.com/view/2772169/
I didn't say I was using itSerum wrote:What are you using? The plain console or with framebuffer?drownd wrote:Why even bother with X ?
I don't think you can go more minimalistic then that, but you can't go more fugly either.
My opinion of course and you've got the right to remain old school.
.
I've never tried a bitmap, why not just convert it to a jpeg or PNG file with the gimp or whatever. Oh and isn't the correct program xsetbg rather than xsetroot; I though xsetroot was just if you wanted a simple colour as your background. Anyway I usually use Esetroot to set the background, it comes with Eterm.Serum wrote:At the moment I've been trying to get a bitmap to load as my wallpaper, but xsetroot just plain doesn't want to do it.
nrl if you have some free time and if you want, can you check if you can get it to work? Thanks.
Well, I wanted to increase my productivity not just the speed and resource usage of the WM. I allready did some reading on Ion as it seemed to be what i was looking for, but I didn't get one thing answered and that was the speed of it.drownd wrote:I didn't say I was using itI'm actually compiling gnome 2.6.1 at the moment, I was just saying if your looking for minimal just ditch X all together if your worried about a speed difference compared to the *boxes
Ohw yeah, I must have confused the two. I did a man on xsetroot and you can use bitmaps with it and it was being used by WMI anyway.nrl wrote:I've never tried a bitmap, why not just convert it to a jpeg or PNG file with the gimp or whatever. Oh and isn't the correct program xsetbg rather than xsetroot; I though xsetroot was just if you wanted a simple colour as your background. Anyway I usually use Esetroot to set the background, it comes with Eterm.
Oh BTW have you discovered "wmiremote -t" yet, it lets you set that text down the bottome right to whatever you want. I use a script that runs every 5 seconds and sets it to a clock and the status of my mailbox.
Well I don't think you will notice a speed difference between ion and the *boxes they are both about as minimal as you can getSerum wrote:Well, I wanted to increase my productivity not just the speed and resource usage of the WM. I allready did some reading on Ion as it seemed to be what i was looking for, but I didn't get one thing answered and that was the speed of it.drownd wrote:I didn't say I was using itI'm actually compiling gnome 2.6.1 at the moment, I was just saying if your looking for minimal just ditch X all together if your worried about a speed difference compared to the *boxes
It's probably a macho kind of thing. Like haveing the fastest car or having the best hard and software...
Ohw yeah, I must have confused the two. I did a man on xsetroot and you can use bitmaps with it and it was being used by WMI anyway.nrl wrote:I've never tried a bitmap, why not just convert it to a jpeg or PNG file with the gimp or whatever. Oh and isn't the correct program xsetbg rather than xsetroot; I though xsetroot was just if you wanted a simple colour as your background. Anyway I usually use Esetroot to set the background, it comes with Eterm.
Oh BTW have you discovered "wmiremote -t" yet, it lets you set that text down the bottome right to whatever you want. I use a script that runs every 5 seconds and sets it to a clock and the status of my mailbox.
OOoohh!! No i haven't i'll go check it out right now!![]()
I've figured as much, that's probably why there isn't a lot of info to be found on the subject. I wonder how long it will take before you turn coat and go for the boxes. A lot of people do, wel they do in gentoo.drownd wrote: Well I don't think you will notice a speed difference between ion and the *boxes they are both about as minimal as you can get
I've used all the boxes I've been using *nix's for about 6 years now...redhat > suse > slackware > openbsd > freebsd > gentooSerum wrote:I've figured as much, that's probably why there isn't a lot of info to be found on the subject. I wonder how long it will take before you turn coat and go for the boxes. A lot of people do, wel they do in gentoo.drownd wrote: Well I don't think you will notice a speed difference between ion and the *boxes they are both about as minimal as you can get
What I don't like about evilwm is that (last time I used it anyway) you had to launch an xterm that you would launch other apps from and there didn't seem to be any configurability of keybindings etc.slarti] wrote:There are smaller window managers though. Evilwm does not tile, but is very efficient, and I like it lots.