Like imagine a desktop with NOTHING. You have a modifier key and a terminal. You launch programs manually and then you can slap the windows around very easily and very rapidly. The idea being that you have no desktop eating u resources but you do have the ability to split windows, slam them, rearrange them. all really quick and easily.
Cool. I work with a guy that is one of the core maintainers on the Fedora Project. That's not a distro I tend to spend much time with. That's still one of the neat things about Linux. i have all these people around me that lean on Fedora - yet i don't think I have even seen it in years.
Learned about it back in the days when it was "fedora core" when I tried to go to college the second time. Dinked around with it for years until the Win10 mess with forced upgrades/upgrade nagging and "just" telemetry data and I decided it was time to leave.
I spent a year or two exclusively booting Fedora to force myself to use it, and then I started dual booting Win7, because unfortunately some stuff just wasn't practical without some form of windows to fall back on.
It's very very pointed.
Like imagine a desktop with NOTHING. You have a modifier key and a terminal. You launch programs manually and then you can slap the windows around very easily and very rapidly. The idea being that you have no desktop eating u resources but you do have the ability to split windows, slam them, rearrange them. all really quick and easily.
sounds similar to standalone xwindows (I played with a few odd distros here and there before I settled into Fedora)
Cool. I work with a guy that is one of the core maintainers on the Fedora Project. That's not a distro I tend to spend much time with. That's still one of the neat things about Linux. i have all these people around me that lean on Fedora - yet i don't think I have even seen it in years.
Learned about it back in the days when it was "fedora core" when I tried to go to college the second time. Dinked around with it for years until the Win10 mess with forced upgrades/upgrade nagging and "just" telemetry data and I decided it was time to leave.
I spent a year or two exclusively booting Fedora to force myself to use it, and then I started dual booting Win7, because unfortunately some stuff just wasn't practical without some form of windows to fall back on.
Yea man I gave up on the dual booting thing forever ago. I just get nothing out of running windows. Like at all.