twm
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Post your scrot in the appropriate section. If the section does not exist yet - open a new thread ;)
Post your scrot in the appropriate section. If the section does not exist yet - open a new thread ;)
- ChefIronBelly
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twm
Playing 'Old School' sauced to my preference.
and this is the answer to the question in the cwm thread.
and this is the answer to the question in the cwm thread.
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- mrneilypops
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Re: twm
@ChefIronBelly
Cool movie!
Cool movie!
- ChefIronBelly
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Re: twm
A real bonus is when you do a minimal install with whatever disto and then later decide to add X. Some distro's will include twm and xterm. Drop this .twmrc in as I did above a few posts and BAM rockin it Old School.
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- ChefIronBelly
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Re: twm
One more example for tonight.
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- ChefIronBelly
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Re: twm
Yes it is... getting lots of mileage out of it.pidsley wrote:Is that the .twmrc from Old School? I'm happy to see you are getting some use out of it.
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Re: twm
New Gentoo install on the core2 duo.
Building:
Nice to see the default twm when you get it all working:
Even better when ratpoison and urxvt are working.
Bringing it all up to date.
I'm going to keep this one on stable. I swear this core2 duo is as fast as my phenom X4. Intel rules. Tomorrow I go looking for new fonts and colors.
Building:
Nice to see the default twm when you get it all working:
Even better when ratpoison and urxvt are working.
Bringing it all up to date.
I'm going to keep this one on stable. I swear this core2 duo is as fast as my phenom X4. Intel rules. Tomorrow I go looking for new fonts and colors.
Re: twm
Nice bones that looks great! I am going to have to give twm a try! I also still need to give slackware a full on go!
Out of the corner of your eye you spot him... Shia LaBeouf.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0u4M6vppCI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0u4M6vppCI
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Re: twm
^ xclock actually slightly less fugly without a frame. impressive!
All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense, and true and false and meaningless in some sense.
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Re: twm
playing around with a borderless twm, imitating cwm. Why? no idea
Emacs, tty-clock, two terms. Started with pidsley's twmrc_grey but destroyed it:
Emacs, tty-clock, two terms. Started with pidsley's twmrc_grey but destroyed it:
..gnutella..
Re: twm
Experimental system; twm, xterm, dkeg's "citystreets" xcolors.
I have been encouraged to explain a little more about what's going on in these strange scrots I have been posting.
These systems are built using buildroot. Buildroot is designed to build small embedded systems. It can build all kinds of things, including X. It uses busybox for coreutils (and many other things), and can build with busybox init, sysvinit, or even systemd. I use busybox init, and I am still learning about everything buildroot can do.
(side note) If you want to experiment with busybox init on a regular bbq spin, read this topic: http://linuxbbq.org/bbs/viewtopic.php?f ... sybox+init
After casting the necessary chicken bones (selecting the appropriate options in buildroot's menuconfig) and running the buildroot make, I get a basic filesystem containing busybox and associated executables and libraries. I then add some extra stuff like the busybox minirc init script (see the reference above for more information) and tar the whole thing up into one archive. The archive does not contain a bootloader, so the system must be run on a machine that also has another distro controlling grub. The archive is "installed" by unpacking it onto a target partition (like a Gentoo stage3 archive). Then I add a custom no-module kernel, and a grub entry for the new system in the main distro's grub.cfg. There are several ways to add additional packages, but there is no package manager.
Notice that the entire system (including X) takes up less than 100M on the disk. It's not in TinyCore or Slitaz territory, but it's small.
This is still highly experimental shit for me. Most of the time I feel like this:
But it's fun, and if you don't push your limits you never learn anything.
As usual, this is built on the work of many other people, but to thank just a few: thanks to machinebacon for the idea, GekkoP and DebianJoe for testing, dkeg for xcolors and xsetroot -mod 3 3, hut (on the Arch board) for the bones of the busybox init script, and everyone involved in making buildroot. If I forgot anyone, I apologize.
I have been encouraged to explain a little more about what's going on in these strange scrots I have been posting.
These systems are built using buildroot. Buildroot is designed to build small embedded systems. It can build all kinds of things, including X. It uses busybox for coreutils (and many other things), and can build with busybox init, sysvinit, or even systemd. I use busybox init, and I am still learning about everything buildroot can do.
(side note) If you want to experiment with busybox init on a regular bbq spin, read this topic: http://linuxbbq.org/bbs/viewtopic.php?f ... sybox+init
After casting the necessary chicken bones (selecting the appropriate options in buildroot's menuconfig) and running the buildroot make, I get a basic filesystem containing busybox and associated executables and libraries. I then add some extra stuff like the busybox minirc init script (see the reference above for more information) and tar the whole thing up into one archive. The archive does not contain a bootloader, so the system must be run on a machine that also has another distro controlling grub. The archive is "installed" by unpacking it onto a target partition (like a Gentoo stage3 archive). Then I add a custom no-module kernel, and a grub entry for the new system in the main distro's grub.cfg. There are several ways to add additional packages, but there is no package manager.
Notice that the entire system (including X) takes up less than 100M on the disk. It's not in TinyCore or Slitaz territory, but it's small.
This is still highly experimental shit for me. Most of the time I feel like this:
But it's fun, and if you don't push your limits you never learn anything.
As usual, this is built on the work of many other people, but to thank just a few: thanks to machinebacon for the idea, GekkoP and DebianJoe for testing, dkeg for xcolors and xsetroot -mod 3 3, hut (on the Arch board) for the bones of the busybox init script, and everyone involved in making buildroot. If I forgot anyone, I apologize.
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- Baconator
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Re: twm
Thank you Pidsley for this post. I think this should be like an 'official guide to negative hard disk and RAM usage' :)
..gnutella..
- Dr_Chroot
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Re: twm
^ this. Thanks pids!
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Re: twm
@pidsley Thanks so much for sharing. I had some busybox related stuff to ask you but your Pm is disabled.
@bacon Should we create a thread with all the links to sir pidsley's experiments and howtos and sticky it ?
@bacon Should we create a thread with all the links to sir pidsley's experiments and howtos and sticky it ?
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