1 point

That sounds a lot nicer than the jav ascript garbage colle ction nightmar e that is gnome-m utter / gjs

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18 points

desktop’s built like a flashbang fr

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17 points

Ngl it’d look great on an e-ink display though. I really wish that tech would make some big advances

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2 points

I had big hopes for the Pixel Qi technology (high-res LCD layered over a low-res color display that could be turned off to save power)

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5 points

This is so clean, although I’m not a fan of light themes this one definitively checks the boxes of consistency, tidyness and simpleness.

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11 points

Yes! Emacs has already taken over most of my desktop environment apps with the exception of the web browser and a few apps like Blender and Gimp. I haven’t gone as far as you, getting each Emacs buffer to display in its own frame in is own WM-level window, but that would make for a more immersive experience. Also, your color scheme is similar to the one I use now. I love it.

I can’t wait for the day when software written in Lisp takes over my window manager, then my panel, then my session manager, then my whole operating system kernel.

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3 points
*

If you want each of them to be their own window you can do a:

emacsclient -c -e '(elfeed)' 

to do that. (Note: not completely sure of the syntax but that’s the basic idea of it)

Edit: Added -c flag to create new frame (window)

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1 point

That might work if I re-bound the split-window function to launch a new Emacs client, because this is the function that most other Emacs functions use to split the frame into windows.

But I think a better approach would be to just add a single rule function into the display-buffer-alist that always asks for a new frame no matter what the input is.

Mickey Peterson wrote an article on how Emacs manages its own windows, and the Elisp Manual on Windows is pretty good too.

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2 points

Correction: it’s

emacsclient -c -e '(elfeed)'

The -c flag seems important, as it creates a new frame (a new window)

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3 points

God’s, that’s beautiful!

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