NEW WORKSTATION, NEW DISTRO, NEW WINDOW MANAGER, NEW, NEW NEW! (Posted 2016-11-21 16:25:14 by corey_reichle) So, got a new workstation, and along with that came migrating all my stuff over. Now, while I use Ansible [ http://www.coreyreichle.com/2015/04/09/getting-started-with-ansible/ ] to manage the configuration for the system overall, much of my config boils down to personal dot files in my home dir.  So, I was using rsync to keep things in sync between my primary workstation, and my backup workstation. It works, more or less.  Sitting down between machines is easy-peasy, and they both feel the same, and work the same. However, I felt I needed a "clean break", as I have collected quite a bit of cruft lately.  So, the rsync was broken, my homedir on the primary was backed up to a tarball, and with my new machine, I chose a distro. Manjaro Linux is where it's at!  Why?  Well, ArchLinux looks really neat, as I do love the breadth of the AUR.  Most any package is available to build.  Manjaro, because they took the Arch distro, placed a minimal number of sane defaults in place, and built a good desktop experience around a couple of window managers, i3 specifically. I am loving i3 window manager, since playing with it on PCBSD.  I love that Manjaro gave you a decent place to start with in i3. Also, many of my apps I've changed out.  Not using Pidgin for chat, using Finch now.  Finch is a TUI-based version of Pidgin, and my keyboard-driven work keys really well into it.  And, I don't lose any of the functionality either from Pidgin. I was using Alpine for email, and it worked well.  I finally moved over to Thunderbird from Evolution, only because I could never get Calcurse working correctly with caldav.  I think it's a caldav issue, really, and nothing against calcurse.  Otherwise, it was great.  I still use Alpine when I'm checking mail only, and not worrying about calendaring. My biggest change, since I do a lot of terminal-based work was, shockingly, my terminal emulator.  I always hated on xterm.  It seemed clunky, lacked features, and felt like "Just the minimal required terminal features".  I preferred mate-terminal, as it had all I felt was lacking.  Turns out:  I was just uneducated.  After digging into xterm, and customizing it to my liking, it now very much prefer it over mate-terminal. And, I've solarized everything with a light theme, wherever possible.  Even my tty's.  So, now, I look like a hipster hacker :P My workflow productivity has jumped with these changes, and my only problem now is I have to keep myself from customizing things too much, as it's easy to kill 5 hours getting your desktop to look and respond just how you want it to. -------- There are no comments on this post. To submit a comment on this post, email corey.reichle@gmail.com or visit us on the web [ https://www.coreyreichle.com ].