• What am I seeing here? It’s hard to see your computer screen from here, to be honest.

      • Alright, tell me a bit about it? All I see are stuffed animals and stickers. I’m not into it at all—it feels juvenile—but maybe if you explain what’s going on…?

        • 7 hours

          idk im become silly like a child keyboard is custom on lubed gateron smoothies the black thing with stickers on dead zones is graphic tablet which i use sometimes to draw or just as mouse computer is mac m1 pro with NixOS installed i think should be better to post on c/[email protected] but i dont have thigh highs…

          • You really don’t need thigh-highs to belong with the Unix family. Everyone is welcome.

    • 11 hours

      true, boykisser really describes me

    • Which tiling window manager did you go back to from Niri, and what made you not like Niri (a scrolling window manager)?

      • I’m not the person you replied to, but i keep trying niri and it just doesn’t click with me. Theoretically from a screen real estate perspective the scrolling model would be better, but to me it feels less organized and i’m more likely to lose track of my windows. On a dynamic tiler i might only open 3 windows max on a workspace, but atleast i can see in one glance what windows are open, and my waybar is configured to only show workspaces that are either active or have windows opened on them, so it makes things super clear for me.

        • I was like you at first. Tried it once and went back to Hyperland.

          Gave Niri another shot and then the mental model clicked. It’s just so comfy to not have your windows resized all the time just because of opening another app or window. The overview is also bomb. You can also install stuff like Noctalia shell which comes with a dock, so you can quickly switch to an app anywhere on any workspace. Niri supports that. 👍

          And I use workspaces in Niri for the exact same reason. One for coding/work, one for communication (slack, email, etc), one for gaming/entertainment.

          I recommend giving it another shot if you’re interested and open-minded to optimizing your workflows. Otherwise stick with what you know, that’s also fine.