Topic: My attempt to bring winsplit revolution to linux
In the past I tried pretty much every tilling window manager out there but I always ended going back to 'normal' ones.
Tilling window managers are cool if one has a big screen and doesn't need to do many distinct things throughout a working session. That's not always the case so they often end up staying more on the way then increasing productivity.
Also many applications have odd behavior when used in a tilling environment, for many reasons which I'll not get into.
So, getting frustrated between thousands of frenetic and unproductive mouse clicks (I hate mouse over-usage) and the strict nature of tilling window managers, I found winsplit revolution.
I installed it on my work computer (windows XP) and it turned out to be EXACTLY what I was looking for.
Since then, I've been looking for a good alternative to winsplit revolution that would work on linux. There are a few out there but they either have to heavy dependencies (compiz for example) or do not do exactly what I wanted.
So, to get rid of this frustration I decided to give it a try a while ago.
This is still highly experimental and is more of a draft than production software. Despite that, I'm using it every day and it does do what I want. If you're desperate like me, you should definitely give it a try:
I called it azulejo, which is the portuguese word for 'tile'. Tiles are a very important element on portuguese architecture and culture, so this is my lame tribute to tiles ![]()
You can download a usable version from bitbucket:
https://bitbucket.org/plainas/azulejo/get/usable.tar.gz
Usage and a very brief description of how it works:
http://lamehacks.net/blog/introducing-a
w-tilling/
As much as I love debian software dependency management from a end user prespective, I find the process of creating deb packages over-complicated and not so well documented, so this is where I would ask some kind soul to branch the source and add that DEBIAN packaging folder to it.
Last edited by pico (2011-01-26 23:01:13)