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Tiling wm
Tiling wm







tiling wm

There’s been a surge of interest in tiling window managers lately, with tons of articles and howtos about things like i3 and Awesome, and System76, too, made tiling a prime feature in Pop!_OS. Worm is written in Nim and is based on X11, a Wayland version isn’t in the pipeline in the near future, according to him. This release is also shipping with a brand-new Window Manager developed by our community editions team member Codic12 and we are more than proud to present you this WM that was developed a little bit under our wing.Ĭodic12 decided to develop this WM to satisfy his need for a lightweight window manager that worked well with both floating and tiling modes and had window decorations with minimise, maximise and close buttons in any layout desired and that could run on a semi-embedded system like the PIZero. However, at the very end of the release notes for its latest release, there’s this: Today his novels are all but forgotten while his art pottery is highly valued and collected.EndeavourOS is an Arch-based Linux distribution, and in and of itself not something I’d write about here. Before he died in 1917, he had published seven novels, with two more appearing posthumously. He found financial success as an author in a way he never had as a ceramicist. His long, "old-fashioned" novels, more like the slow-paced Victorian novels of decades earlier, were widely and surprisingly popular.

tiling wm

"All my life I have been trying to make beautiful things," he said at the time, "and now that I can make them nobody wants them."ĭe Morgan published his first novel, Joseph Vance, in 1906 (at age 67). He was always a better artist than business man, and he left the pottery world in 1907. He was married to the painter Evelyn De Morgan (who painted the portrait shown here).ĭe Morgan was an important figure in the British Arts and Crafts Movement, and a good friend of William Morris and the (later) Pre-Raphaelite Circle, designing tiles, stained glass, and furniture for Morris & Co. William Frend De Morgan was an English potter, tile designer, and at the end of his life a popular novelist.









Tiling wm