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#961 2020-07-30 13:17:17

ratcheer
Member
From: USA
Registered: 2015-10-05
Posts: 503

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

I ran Siduction with LXQT, then Openbox for several years. Excellent distro, good people.

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#962 2020-07-30 14:51:28

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

DeepDayze wrote:

KDE looks cool but seems to always be a work in progress, and same could be said for GNOME. Openbox/tint2/jgmenu seems to be pretty rock solid in comparison.

I find KDE in Buster to have some serious issues as it is as cannot save sessions.

If you're looking for Plasma that just works: (other than the 'Name Brands')

KaOS - LFS, rolling, very fresh, light, active community, community packages repo, pacman - single developer, limited, but adequate repos.

Artix - Arch, rolling, stable and testing ISOs, active community, systemd free, AUR repo.

There may be others, but these are the two I've spent time playing on with good results.

8bit

#963 2020-07-31 00:12:00

DeepDayze
Like sands through an hourglass...
From: In Linux Land
Registered: 2017-05-28
Posts: 1,946

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

ratcheer wrote:

I ran Siduction with LXQT, then Openbox for several years. Excellent distro, good people.

My other box I ran sidux->aptosid->siduction for years and now run BL on it. Agreed siduction is quite solid and has a great lineage. If you like Sid then siduction is it, but I've ran BL upgraded to Sid (with selected packages from Experimental) for a while and that worked well till I built my new Ryzen system which now has Lithium.

Last edited by DeepDayze (2020-07-31 00:13:00)


Real Men Use Linux

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#964 2020-07-31 01:56:20

hhh
Gaucho
From: High in the Custerdome
Registered: 2015-09-17
Posts: 16,638
Website

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

DeepDayze wrote:

... but I've ran BL upgraded to Sid

I have too, but I always watched the aptosid Dist-Upgrades Warnings forum. And linuxbbq back when it was cooking.

https://forum.siduction.org/index.php?board=22.0

https://linuxbbq.com/bbs/index.php


I don't care what you do at home. Would you care to explain?

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#965 2020-07-31 03:29:14

DeepDayze
Like sands through an hourglass...
From: In Linux Land
Registered: 2017-05-28
Posts: 1,946

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

hhh wrote:
DeepDayze wrote:

... but I've ran BL upgraded to Sid

I have too, but I always watched the aptosid Dist-Upgrades Warnings forum. And linuxbbq back when it was cooking.

https://forum.siduction.org/index.php?board=22.0

https://linuxbbq.com/bbs/index.php

Yep, the dist-upgrades warning section is a great early warning system resource for all those who run Sid, even if not siduction. Always made it a habit to check it for any reports of breakage on a d-u or when there's a transition going on in Sid that might cause breakages.


Real Men Use Linux

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#966 2020-07-31 13:05:48

ratcheer
Member
From: USA
Registered: 2015-10-05
Posts: 503

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

@hhh - Yeah, LinuxBBQ was another one I ran for a long while, too. Probably the next one after I used Siduction.

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#967 2020-08-05 17:58:05

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

Functional O.S.

https://www.functional.altervista.org/index.html

Debian testing + Ubuntu LTS. By combining these two bases we
have obtained stability, security and a vast number of available software.

desk.th.pngfetch.th.pngmenu.th.pngthunar.th.png

Nicely responsive, way too much software installed, easy to customize.

Another interesting, odd ball distro brought to you by,

8bit

Last edited by deleted0 (2020-08-05 18:33:02)

#968 2020-08-12 15:42:17

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

In post #897, I showcased the Distro called MiyoLinux - Devuan with System V, and Openbox.

The creator is out with another interesting spin - MiyoLinux wmderland (Rolling)
wmderland is a tiling window manager similar to i3, but it's configuration file is much simpler and easy to edit. This spin is based on the unstable version of Devuan, and includes the main, contrib, and non-free repos. It also has very few packages installed, no browser, etc; left up to the user to select. Fast, light, fun.

2020-08-12-092916_1440x900_scrot.th.png2020-08-11-204147_1440x900_scrot.th.png

DL and video:

https://sourceforge.net/projects/miyolinux/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAhzSdhBowc

The creator's you tube channel with some interesting videos of various spins he's created:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYiPwG … _GggFfvfig

8bit

edit:
At idle, fresh start
2020-08-12-134014_1440x900_scrot.th.png2020-08-12-134316_1440x900_scrot.th.png

Last edited by deleted0 (2020-08-12 19:39:56)

#969 2020-08-14 12:41:06

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

^ No love for MiyoLinux wmderland? I thought this one might garner a comment or two.

4*2bit

#970 2020-08-14 14:20:52

DeepDayze
Like sands through an hourglass...
From: In Linux Land
Registered: 2017-05-28
Posts: 1,946

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

eight.bit.al wrote:

^ No love for MiyoLinux wmderland? I thought this one might garner a comment or two.

4*2bit

Looks nice and wonder if there are any users of i3 and its clones on here and perhaps they'll weigh in.


Real Men Use Linux

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#971 2020-08-14 18:37:36

PackRat
jgmenu user Numero Uno
Registered: 2015-10-02
Posts: 2,770

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

DeepDayze wrote:
eight.bit.al wrote:

^ No love for MiyoLinux wmderland? I thought this one might garner a comment or two.

4*2bit

Looks nice and wonder if there are any users of i3 and its clones on here and perhaps they'll weigh in.

He has this on his git page -

A minimal i3-gaps, written in C++ and Xlib.

[snip]

No bloated (unused) features!

But doesn't elaborate on what he stripped out because he considered the feature to be bloat.

Only 88KB after compiled and stripped

Looks like he removed the tabbed and stacked layouts and modified the default tiling layout. Removed containers (maybe) and the i3 bar. He's using polybar (and jgmenu?) in the default setup.

Appears to be a functional window manager. On a reddit page he said it was a project to learn xlib, C++ and X11, so, looks like he figured it out.

Edit - wmderland is available in the void repos so I gave it try. Keybindings were not working, autostarted an xterm so I could do some stuff. Probably not too bad when it's working. I think there is an Arch (AUR?) build.

Last edited by PackRat (2020-08-15 00:37:42)


You must unlearn what you have learned.
    -- yoda

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#972 2020-08-14 23:56:37

truscellino
Member
From: Bristol, UK
Registered: 2020-06-25
Posts: 14

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

cloverskull wrote:

In an effort to resurrect some vintage Mac gear, I discovered (much to my dismay) that PowerPC macs aren’t really supported by any linux distros these days, unless you want something old and unsupported.

Gentoo is an option but I had issues getting it to work on my g5 recently, but I learned about a community fork of void linux specifically for ppc. I gave it a shot and I have to say, I’m impressed! It’s similar to arch in that you wind up with something barebones and have to figure out how to put together your linux system and desktop.

It’s also surprisingly fast. I dig it. I may try it on bare metal on a modern PC just to see how it performs.

Sorry it's an old post but I have to say I agree! Adelie Linux and void-ppc are two interesting projects that actually bring modern linux technologies to ppc machines...

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#973 2020-08-15 18:29:00

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

PackRat wrote:

Looks like he removed the tabbed and stacked layouts and modified the default tiling layout. Removed containers (maybe) and the i3 bar. He's using polybar (and jgmenu?) in the default setup.

Thanks for the comments and insight. Polybar, dmenu, (which I'm beginning to like) and two Rofi menus.
This is my first time using a tiling WM seriously, and getting quite hooked on it.
Installed apt-listbugs and will try to keep unstable going, but if it breaks badly I'll be looking for another TWM distro to replace it.

8bit

#974 2020-08-15 19:15:36

PackRat
jgmenu user Numero Uno
Registered: 2015-10-02
Posts: 2,770

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

eight.bit.al wrote:
PackRat wrote:

Looks like he removed the tabbed and stacked layouts and modified the default tiling layout. Removed containers (maybe) and the i3 bar. He's using polybar (and jgmenu?) in the default setup.

Thanks for the comments and insight. Polybar, dmenu, (which I'm beginning to like) and two Rofi menus.
This is my first time using a tiling WM seriously, and getting quite hooked on it.
Installed apt-listbugs and will try to keep unstable going, but if it breaks badly I'll be looking for another TWM distro to replace it.

8bit

I don't know about a tiling window manager (TWM?) distro, but you can get the same functionality and aesthetic using bspwm. The config file for bspwm isn't too difficult to work with.


You must unlearn what you have learned.
    -- yoda

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#975 2020-08-15 19:33:21

manyroads
Member
From: around here, somewhere
Registered: 2019-04-16
Posts: 159
Website

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

Here's some info on TWM (Timeless Widow Manager) https://opensource.com/article/19/12/twm-linux-desktop


Pax vobiscum,
Mark Rabideau - https://many-roads.com  https:/eirenicon.org 
i3wm, dwm, hlwm on sid/ arch ~ Reg. Linux User #449130
"For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong." H. L. Mencken

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#976 2020-08-15 20:37:05

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

PackRat wrote:

I don't know about a tiling window manager (TWM?) distro,

Yeah, that could have been worded better. A distro with a TWM spin as opposed to a distro with TWM tacked on. Quite a few distros allow one to select a DE during the install and too many of them are bland, off the self implementations of that DE. That's what I like about Miyo spins, they're carefully blended base and DE. Like BL, it's much more than Openbox tacked on Debian. The best case, IMHO, is MX Linux. Debian stable with their own repos filled with backports/builds of the latest packages. Hoping this doesn't step on anyone's toes.

but you can get the same functionality and aesthetic using bspwm. The config file for bspwm isn't too difficult to work with.

Thanks, that's what I was hoping for, a suggestion. smile

8bit

#977 2020-08-15 21:44:11

PackRat
jgmenu user Numero Uno
Registered: 2015-10-02
Posts: 2,770

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

eight.bit.al wrote:
PackRat wrote:

I don't know about a tiling window manager (TWM?) distro,

Yeah, that could have been worded better. A distro with a TWM spin as opposed to a distro with TWM tacked on. Quite a few distros allow one to select a DE during the install and too many of them are bland, off the self implementations of that DE. That's what I like about Miyo spins, they're carefully blended base and DE. Like BL, it's much more than Openbox tacked on Debian. The best case, IMHO, is MX Linux. Debian stable with their own repos filled with backports/builds of the latest packages. Hoping this doesn't step on anyone's toes.

but you can get the same functionality and aesthetic using bspwm. The config file for bspwm isn't too difficult to work with.

Thanks, that's what I was hoping for, a suggestion. smile

8bit

Here's a nice shot of bspwm on three screens; ArchLabs


You must unlearn what you have learned.
    -- yoda

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#978 2020-08-16 07:30:58

ohnonot
...again
Registered: 2015-09-29
Posts: 5,592

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

Folks please don't use TWM as an abbreviation for "tiling window manager" - because there's only one twm, and it's this one!

manyroads wrote:

Here's some info on TWM (Timeless Widow Manager) https://opensource.com/article/19/12/twm-linux-desktop

Oh, interesting.

Last edited by ohnonot (2021-07-04 09:33:51)

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#979 2020-08-16 12:26:45

deleted0
Guest

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

^ Let me count the number of acronyms that have multiple meanings. Oh wait, I've run out of fingers and toes. smile

8bit

Last edited by deleted0 (2020-08-16 13:40:33)

#980 2020-08-16 15:04:58

ratcheer
Member
From: USA
Registered: 2015-10-05
Posts: 503

Re: Distro-hoppers anonymous

I just ordered a new PC. Color me excited!

My existing hosts are running Arch / Openbox (desktop system) and Fedora / Gnome (notebook). I won't be putting Fedora on my new one, and I'm not sure I want Arch. I'm thinking MX or Artix. I'm tired of everything being subsumed by systemd. But maybe I should just stick with a mainstream distro and not worry about that.

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