#openboxwm — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #openboxwm, aggregated by home.social.
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@midtsveen Currently I have no Linux installed, but when I will, it will be #AlpineLinux with #OpenboxWM, no DE
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@midtsveen Currently I have no Linux installed, but when I will, it will be #AlpineLinux with #OpenboxWM, no DE
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@midtsveen Currently I have no Linux installed, but when I will, it will be #AlpineLinux with #OpenboxWM, no DE
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@midtsveen Currently I have no Linux installed, but when I will, it will be #AlpineLinux with #OpenboxWM, no DE
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@midtsveen Currently I have no Linux installed, but when I will, it will be #AlpineLinux with #OpenboxWM, no DE
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El 19 de septiembre de 2025 completé mi primer media jornada en #bspwm un #tilling #windowmanager luego de casi 4 meses en #OpenboxWM
Ha sido una experiencia increíble y que iré repitiendo hasta pasarme al 100%
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I can't wait to buy this set of themes 🤩 awesome work, as usual, Aditya!
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I can't wait to buy this set of themes 🤩 awesome work, as usual, Aditya!
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I can't wait to buy this set of themes 🤩 awesome work, as usual, Aditya!
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I can't wait to buy this set of themes 🤩 awesome work, as usual, Aditya!
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#debian #linux #opensource #openbox #openboxwm #minimalism
Красота :blobfoxmeltblush: -
#debian #linux #opensource #openbox #openboxwm #minimalism
Красота :blobfoxmeltblush: -
#debian #linux #opensource #openbox #openboxwm #minimalism
Красота :blobfoxmeltblush: -
#debian #linux #opensource #openbox #openboxwm #minimalism
Красота :blobfoxmeltblush: -
A friend pointed me to https://github.com/labwc/labwc today, which is so cool to see!
> Labwc is a wlroots-based window-stacking compositor for wayland, inspired by openbox.
I started Openbox in my first year of university, and worked on it consistently, with my main dev buddy Mikachu, for quite a few years before eventually finding a bit of a sweet spot of functionality, and then eventually moving off of Linux for my personal devices and thus leaving usage of it behind. This feels like seeing my software baby growing up and going out into the world in new ways. :BlobCat_Flower:
> In order to avoid reinventing configuration and theme syntaxes, the openbox 3.6 specification is used. This does not mean that labwc is an openbox clone but rather that configuration files will look and feel familiar... Openbox spec is somewhat of a stable standard considering how long it has remained unchanged for and how wide-spread its adoption is by lightweight distributions such as LXDE, LXQt, BunsenLabs, ArchLabs, Mabox and Raspian.
Very cool that the theme format has become something that people would call a standard. :BlobCat_PeekBlush:
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A friend pointed me to https://github.com/labwc/labwc today, which is so cool to see!
> Labwc is a wlroots-based window-stacking compositor for wayland, inspired by openbox.
I started Openbox in my first year of university, and worked on it consistently, with my main dev buddy Mikachu, for quite a few years before eventually finding a bit of a sweet spot of functionality, and then eventually moving off of Linux for my personal devices and thus leaving usage of it behind. This feels like seeing my software baby growing up and going out into the world in new ways. :BlobCat_Flower:
> In order to avoid reinventing configuration and theme syntaxes, the openbox 3.6 specification is used. This does not mean that labwc is an openbox clone but rather that configuration files will look and feel familiar... Openbox spec is somewhat of a stable standard considering how long it has remained unchanged for and how wide-spread its adoption is by lightweight distributions such as LXDE, LXQt, BunsenLabs, ArchLabs, Mabox and Raspian.
Very cool that the theme format has become something that people would call a standard. :BlobCat_PeekBlush:
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A friend pointed me to https://github.com/labwc/labwc today, which is so cool to see!
> Labwc is a wlroots-based window-stacking compositor for wayland, inspired by openbox.
I started Openbox in my first year of university, and worked on it consistently, with my main dev buddy Mikachu, for quite a few years before eventually finding a bit of a sweet spot of functionality, and then eventually moving off of Linux for my personal devices and thus leaving usage of it behind. This feels like seeing my software baby growing up and going out into the world in new ways. :BlobCat_Flower:
> In order to avoid reinventing configuration and theme syntaxes, the openbox 3.6 specification is used. This does not mean that labwc is an openbox clone but rather that configuration files will look and feel familiar... Openbox spec is somewhat of a stable standard considering how long it has remained unchanged for and how wide-spread its adoption is by lightweight distributions such as LXDE, LXQt, BunsenLabs, ArchLabs, Mabox and Raspian.
Very cool that the theme format has become something that people would call a standard. :BlobCat_PeekBlush:
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A friend pointed me to https://github.com/labwc/labwc today, which is so cool to see!
> Labwc is a wlroots-based window-stacking compositor for wayland, inspired by openbox.
I started Openbox in my first year of university, and worked on it consistently, with my main dev buddy Mikachu, for quite a few years before eventually finding a bit of a sweet spot of functionality, and then eventually moving off of Linux for my personal devices and thus leaving usage of it behind. This feels like seeing my software baby growing up and going out into the world in new ways. :BlobCat_Flower:
> In order to avoid reinventing configuration and theme syntaxes, the openbox 3.6 specification is used. This does not mean that labwc is an openbox clone but rather that configuration files will look and feel familiar... Openbox spec is somewhat of a stable standard considering how long it has remained unchanged for and how wide-spread its adoption is by lightweight distributions such as LXDE, LXQt, BunsenLabs, ArchLabs, Mabox and Raspian.
Very cool that the theme format has become something that people would call a standard. :BlobCat_PeekBlush:
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A friend pointed me to https://github.com/labwc/labwc today, which is so cool to see!
> Labwc is a wlroots-based window-stacking compositor for wayland, inspired by openbox.
I started Openbox in my first year of university, and worked on it consistently, with my main dev buddy Mikachu, for quite a few years before eventually finding a bit of a sweet spot of functionality, and then eventually moving off of Linux for my personal devices and thus leaving usage of it behind. This feels like seeing my software baby growing up and going out into the world in new ways. :BlobCat_Flower:
> In order to avoid reinventing configuration and theme syntaxes, the openbox 3.6 specification is used. This does not mean that labwc is an openbox clone but rather that configuration files will look and feel familiar... Openbox spec is somewhat of a stable standard considering how long it has remained unchanged for and how wide-spread its adoption is by lightweight distributions such as LXDE, LXQt, BunsenLabs, ArchLabs, Mabox and Raspian.
Very cool that the theme format has become something that people would call a standard. :BlobCat_PeekBlush:
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I'm experimenting with #Fluxbox on #Fedora #LXQt base. Without tuning you get the #WindowsVista #AeroSnap mouse drag feature. I'll continue to see if I can fix all my #KeyboardShortcuts that broke because of the transition (I *think* an #OpenboxWM config file is claiming all the shortcuts before Fluxbox has the chance :blobcatthonking:
Any #suggestions are welcome!
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Just tried #openboxwm while it was lightweight and the only WM I would think about using. I got tint2 panel working but I could never get an icon for WiFi and Volume in the panel.
It might not be what I am looking for. Mostly what I want is a panel with the same things as any other DE has. Unless I am doing it wrong I would not use openboxwm as of right now.
Currently using #voidlinux the distro I really like.