![]() At work on win10 I have stopped bothering. ![]() UpdateĪfter a week, I am still booting into i3 on my linux machine. ![]() I am still stumbling here and there on less common actions, I am forcing myself to think of the hotkeys before resorting to looking at the quick reference card. Luckily the second video in the Code Cast i3wm series walks through many of the steps to make i3 feel more polished. It is like a superpower.Ī few days later I installed and configured the laptop I use for most non-work projects, an older Thinkpad X1 with Solus-Linux, I have been using Budgie since I installed Solus, running i3 is quite a change. After resolving a hotkey conflict, I really like how it works. I followed the path explained in Brian Ketelsen’s blog post and configured i3 on my work laptop under WSL. Resize, move and change windows, open/close mostly anything you can think of to keep your hands on the keyboard and off the mouse. All manipulated by hotkeys, switch from window to window, workspace to workspace. In short, it brings mac like window tiling powers to your linux (and now through WSL Windows) machine. How I got tweeted about running i3 on WSL. Overall I like it, and I am using it right now to write this blog post. I have been trying out i3 windows manager on both Windows 10 and on Linux.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |