Sujet : Re: vtm: tiling window manager with drag and drop
De : smirzo (at) *nospam* example.com (Salvador Mirzo)
Groupes : comp.miscDate : 14. Mar 2025, 16:20:39
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <87o6y3skoo.fsf@example.com>
References : 1 2
candycanearter07 <
candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid>
writes:
Salvador Mirzo <smirzo@example.com> wrote at 00:31 this Sunday (GMT):
Has anyone ever tried this?
>
--8<-------------------------------------------------------->8---
It is a text-based application where the entire user interface is
represented by a mosaic of text cells forming a TUI matrix. The
resulting TUI matrix is just rendered either into its own GUI window or
into a compatible text console.
>
It can wrap any console application and be nested indefinitely, forming
a text-based desktop environment.
--8<-------------------------------------------------------->8---
>
Sources:
https://github.com/directvt/vtm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kofkoxGjFWQ
>
>
It's certainly a cool idea, but I don't see why you wouldn't just go
full terminal (tmux) or full ui (another wm). Maybe this would be useful
for SSH sessions, though?
That's close to what I thought. I think we've reached a point where a
lot of good stuff is already done and we don't really need more, even
though people can do amazing stuff.
I'm currently reading an article whose title is ``[t]he computer built
to last 50 years'' by Ploum, dated 2021 February 4Th. (I should post it
here.) The article has this tone---we don't need to replace computers
all the time. Most of that ``need'' is actually just distraction.
We suffer a lot from distraction. If we remove all distraction, what
happens? We get distracted with what we have left---which is probably a
pretty good deal. :)
Even most of our conversations here on USENET would be classified as
distraction. But I don't think we should kill conversation because
thinking is important in work and I do think thinking is kind of a
collective thing.
I've had thoughts of working a lot in offline mode. I could get USENET
messages every Monday, say, and then spend the rest of the week in
USENET offline mode. Just that move is already a time saver because
working in batch mode is /usually/ more efficient.