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Blackbox (Finally) Updated

mpeg4codec writes "OSNews reported earlier this month that the lightweight Blackbox window manager has been updated to 0.70. Among the new features are EWMH compliance, anti-aliased fonts, unicode support, and backwards compatibility with previous versions' styles. Of course, it brings you all these new features (well, some are optional) while retaining its small binary size, small memory footprint, and short list of dependencies. I for one think it's about time."

47 of 311 comments (clear)

  1. They took too long by Mancat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Too bad that Fluxbox has already killed it off.

    --
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    1. Re:They took too long by Nightreaver · · Score: 3, Funny

      Too bad that Openbox has already killed Fluxbox off, then.

    2. Re:They took too long by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 4, Informative

      No Xinerama support in BlackBox yet? Ug...

      Blackbox has had Xinerama support ever since 0.65, perhaps even before.

      http://blackboxwm.sourceforge.net/BlackboxFeatures
      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
    3. Re:They took too long by virtual_mps · · Score: 3, Informative
      Too bad that Fluxbox has already killed it off.

      Unfortunately fluxbox has a really crappy alt-tab model that the developers don't want to fix. If it wasn't for that fluxbox might be a useful replacement.
  2. It's about time? by green+pizza · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Blackbox has been working great on my machines for 4+ years. This new version looks kind of neat but I'm in no rush to upgrade just for AA fonts. EWMH complance doesn't mean anything to me.

    1. Re:It's about time? by abiessu · · Score: 5, Informative

      "... no rush to upgrade... "

      Normally I'd agree. In this case, blackbox being as lightweight as it is, and having very little in the way of external dependencies, I went for the upgrade as soon as I saw it. Not a mistake per se, except that almost none of the stock styles work properly (read: invisible menu text, font/border/margin sizes changing wildly). Fortunately, one of the stock styles still worked well enough to navigate. I drilled through the new wiki site to find the 'full example' style for 0.70 and dropped that in. The second unfortunate turn is that the full example also has the invisible text problem. After about an hour of tweaking and paring down it was usable, but the whole experience leaves me with, "yep, you're right to hold off on this one."

      Of course, it's possible that there are some conflicts with old (0.65) files on that box...

      --
      Let S_n = {nst+us+vt : s,t in Z \ {0}, u,v in {-1,1}}. For all n in Z where |n| > 2, Z \ S_n is infinite... right?
    2. Re:It's about time? by Zwets · · Score: 3, Informative

      It took me a while, but I managed to find out what EWMH is (the linked page wasn't very helpful, didn't even explain the acronym):

      From this page:

      The EWMH, or Extended Window Manager Hints is a freedesktop.org- developed standard to support a number of conventions for communication between the window manager and clients. It builds on and extends the ICCCM (See Section 3). A copy of the current EWMH standard is available at http://freedesktop.org/Standards/wm-spec/

      --
      One of the lessons of history is that nothing is often a good thing to do and always a clever thing to say. - Will Duran
  3. I'm a heretic! Burn me! by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So I went over to the screenshot site (second one from the bottom) and was under-impressed with what they had displayed. I said to myself, "Self, this looks like any other WM." To which I replied, "Yep."

    I guess you could say I was crazy, but maybe I'm missing something here. What does this offer that other WMs don't offer?

    And it just occurred to me that "small size" is not really a big selling point. Maybe if this was on a 486 with 8 megs of RAM, memory footprint would become a big deal, but if I'm running a system with an actual window manager, not to mention a window server like X, the least of my worries is lack of memory.

  4. Sorry, you are just to slow moving for me by CaptainPinko · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Who trusts something that moves so slow? I mean unless it's perfect or have the means to fix it yourself... unless it already does 100% of what you you 100% well.

    If I report an annoying bug when will it get fixed? If I request a feature when will I get a response?

    While KDE may not be perfect my bugreports get responded too fairly quickly and it's getting better all the time.

    Perhaps, there is something that Fluxbox or Openbox (which appears dead..) can use I don't see this benefiting anyone but a few users and thus not really news worthey. Perhaps for embedded kiosk or something...

    --
    Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
    1. Re:Sorry, you are just to slow moving for me by Brandybuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I mean unless it's perfect...

      Not yet, but it's approaching it :-)

      I think the Free Software crowd is becoming jaded with continual release after release after release. Does one need to keep on adding features just to attract attention? Does one need to purposely introduce bugs just so there's an excuse to cut a new release in six months?

      Sometimes you just have to realize that the software is done. Finished. Completed. That software is Blackbox.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    2. Re:Sorry, you are just to slow moving for me by Jameth · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, Blackbox is a little different. First off, Blackbox is a window manager. KDE is a DE, hence the DE in the name. KWin doesn't really get all that many bugs. It's had a total of about a thousand in three years, about one a day. And most of those didn't matter.

      It is also important to note that I have never had BB crash. Never. I don't use it anymore, I use KDE. However, when I ran BB for about a year, it never crashed. I occasionally got bothered with having to add everything I wanted manually and having trouble configuring it, but there weren't any 'bugs', just wishlist type items. BB really has been stable basically forever because it has always had an extremely precise goal that was well scoped from the start.

      And as for this not mattering to many users, BB is one of the landmark WMs, truly. Just look at how many people use the BB forks. It's one of the all-time favorite WMs out there, and even today, after all this time, is the best looking. It definitely is newsworthy when BB gets a new release.

  5. Keeping a low profile? by Attackman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Looking at their homepage (assuming you still can, as this is an early post), it looks as if nothing's been updated since November of 2004. The new version is available on the download page, though you'd think they'd post something to the effect of ".70 is now up" right on the front page.
    I can only assume these cats are looking to keep a low profile, or to keep a static homepage that they never have to touch.
    Nuances of their site design and motives aside, I'm enticed to try this out.

    --
    Ignore the rantings above. Poster is an idiot.
  6. Re:IceWM by Given+M.+Sur · · Score: 4, Funny

    How is this informative?

    Okay... so my post will be ultra-informative:

    Openbox is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    Fluxbox is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    Enlightenment is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    FVWM is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    Window Maker is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    Metacity is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    Ratpoison is where it's at. It's lightweight, fast, and has more essential features that blackbox is missing.

    and so on...

    --
    nil
  7. Fingers crossed. by greppy · · Score: 3, Funny

    Maybe there's hope for the Duke yet!

  8. Re:Whoopie YAFWMFL by Given+M.+Sur · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yet another freaking window manager for Linux. Why not improve on the existing ones instead of trying to fill bogus niches.

    First of all, this is an update. So, they did improve on an existing one.

    Second, different people have different needs/preferences for WMs, hence the wide variety. IMHO the variety is a strength not a weakness.

    --
    nil
  9. WM & Desktop Environment should match... by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Call me silly, but the WM & Desktop Environment should have a matching theme.

    I know it's a matter of taste, but I can't stand it when I have one theme for my Window Manager, and a second theme for all those applications which run within the windows... it's ugly, less functional, and way, way outdated.

    I suppose that BlackBox & IceWM might be faster then the default KDE or Gnome WM's, but performance isn't usually a big issue for me.

    Although, I can see the benefit when I need to run a remote X application on a remote server, and I don't want a full fledged Gnome or KDE environment... just X, a lightweight WM over a SSH connection.

    1. Re:WM & Desktop Environment should match... by brlancer · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I suppose that BlackBox & IceWM might be faster then the default KDE or Gnome WM's, but performance isn't usually a big issue for me.

      Some of us use computers for real work.

      Window managers are definately a matter of personal taste, but I have real work to do on my boxes and I won't waste cycles on bloated DE's like KDE and Gnome. Blackbox is FAST. It's minimalist, reliable, and simple. It's not something I would get for my grandmother (or my wife) but when I need to be able to sit down at my computer and do real _work_, I could care less what the icons look like or what theme I'm using. Funtionality is different than eye candy. KDE and Gnome cater to an entirely different crowd than Blackbox and they've succumbed to trying to be everything to everyone.

      Blackbox has a very strong following because it does exactly what it sets out to do. If you have the spare cycles to waste then go for something pretty, but there are lots of people for whom performance is a big issue.

      I can see the benefit when I need to run a remote X application on a remote server

      Or on an old laptop which needs to boot quickly to access machines across a serial terminal. Or on new desktops where I'm running multiple browsers, dozens of aterms (with screen sessions), mutt for email, xmms or realplayer for music, gaim, a half dozen company tools (not lightweight), et al.

      Well, I guess "new" is relative. My "new" box is 3 years old and my "old" box is 5 years old.

      --
      Someone asked if I had patched against MSBlast; I said yes, I installed Linux.
  10. Re:I'm a heretic! Burn me! by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Informative
    And it just occurred to me that "small size" is not really a big selling point.

    If you're trying to get Linux and X running on a minimalist platform, small size suddenly becomes very important. Small size also implies fast, and if you're working on real-time graphics, that's a big plus. I don't think it's something I'm going to want, but freedom of choice is an important part of Linux. I wish them the best of luck.

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
  11. Name calling on Slashdot by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I realize that the preferred technique of debate here is a flurry of ad hominems followed by a couple slippery slope arguments and wrapped up with a huge leap of logic. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

    Well, yes, actually there is something wrong with it. By automatically labelling anyone who doesn't agree with you as "a knob" or "astroturfer" or some other epithet, you automatically end any rational debate. Maybe after several dozen posts it may be useful to end a debate with a well-formed insult, but to start off the debate by denigrating anyone who doesn't agree with you is hardly a recipe for enlightenment.

    This kind of thing happens so much on Slashdot that I guess it's just considered the norm. How sad it is that this chance for rational discussion of WM merits (and your post actually does have some good points about the merits or lack thereof of Blackbox) into a name calling match.

  12. Re:Whoopie YAFWMFL by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 4, Informative

    Blackbox is an existing window manager -- it's been around longer than most of the ones that the kids drool over every time a screenshot gets posted. And this "bogus niche" seems to be rather large -- not only do many people use it on their desktop, but I've seen it being used in commercial settings on several occasions. How about you do something productive with your time, rather than complaining when somebody decides to devote their energy into something besides the newest Windows / OSX clone window manager?

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  13. Re:Blackbox ... blah. by Jameth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Make that, "Fluxbox and Openbox *were* much better than Blackbox anyways!"

    Blackbox just released, and those features they noted as being added really *are* cool. In the lightweight WM market, it really is a penny-ante game: No one can add too much, because that makes them not lightweight. Blackbox caught up a lot of ground in this release and could take back its crown with relatively little trouble.

  14. Re:I'm a heretic! Burn me! by Brandybuck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The people who built the later cathedrals in the rennaiscance were of the same opinion. Backed by incredibly wealthy patrons and a surplus of masons, they laughed at earlier era's notions of simplicity. The least of their worries was running out of ink on the blueprints, or running out of tasks for the artisans to perform. "More curliques!" was their battle cry.

    And thus they invented Baroque. It's a nice style, if you're into that kind of thing. But it's hardly a universal aesthetic.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  15. Re:Whoopie YAFWMFL by hikerhat · · Score: 4, Funny
    Yet another freaking window manager for Linux. Why not improve on the existing ones instead of trying to fill bogus niches.

    Yeah. What are we paying these opensource developers for anyway? Oh, wait...

  16. So... by nacturation · · Score: 3, Funny

    How exactly is this going to enable me to make free long distance calls?

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  17. Re:Blackbox is the best! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And it doesn't have all the hideous widgets from Gtk based WMs. They sure are ugly.

    Au Contraire! My favorite Window Manager, XFCE, shows how a GTK+ Window Manager can be created while still looking beautiful.

    I originally chose XFCE because it had low memory requirements and had much of the same polish that existed in CDE. At the time, neither KDE or GNOME had both features. (I'd go as far as to say that GNOME had neither.) Since I first started using it, though, XFCE has become more attractive and even more polished with time. It probably won't run as well on a 16MB P120 as the original versions, but it would probably give GNOME and KDE a good run on a 64MB machine.

    FWIW, I do like how far GNOME and KDE have come. GNOME can feel very pleasent to work in, but only if the distro preconfigures it correctly. The default installation is crap.

    KDE, OTOH, is more beautiful than ever. It's applications are solid, its installation easy, and its capabilities top notch. It's just too bad that they've never worked the kinks out of that "too much cluttered 3D" feel it has.

  18. EWMH and the whole story... by Gopal.V · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's about time it came out with EWMH .. I've already switched to fluxbox (yeah, and fluxgen is a very helpful guy on irc).

    You might want to say that Forking is bad for the health of any project - but sometimes such branching off can keep a project alive. If there hadn't been a fluxbox - I'd have dumped blackbox for good.

    Is there any reason for blackbox anymore ?. (well, other than the "choice" factor).

  19. Re:IceWM by Mad_Rain · · Score: 3, Funny

    at least you had the common sense to leave out Gnome and KDE from your rant. :D

    --
    "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
  20. Blackbox is ok, but.. by SocialEngineer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I prefer the likes of BadWM. Sadly, though, it is in dire need of an update. People are working on it, sorta :/ BadWM is what a minimalistic WM should be (IMHO) - no window decorations except for a border around the window, quick keyboard commands, and it handles virtual desktops. I really don't like having a titlebar on my windows.

    I've been using Ion2 recently, and it isn't too bad either.. it's fast, although switching from BadWM to a tiling WM is a bit difficult :P

    As far as those saying WMs shouldn't have to worry about memory footprints.. I have 768 megs of RAM, and I still don't like a WM that hogs RAM. I do memory-intensive work, and I don't want my WM taking up all my RAM just so it can look pretty. Even if I had 2 gigs of RAM, I'd still prefer BadWM or Ion2.

    --
    "Better to be vulgar than non-existent" -Bev Henson
  21. Re:What next? by Coryoth · · Score: 3, Informative

    Nope, next update is to Emacs so the whole Emacs/VI holy war can erupt and somebody can poke there head up and say pico or joe.

    Don't laugh, the new (CVS) version of GNU Emacs uses GTK+ and integrates into GNOME or XFCE quite nicely (except for keybindings, of course, which can be changed to suit). I'm quite keen for the next version to actually arrive - comiling from CVS is all well and good, but it isn't exactly a stable finished product.

    Jedidiah.

  22. Re:I still don't know what EMWH is. by datafr0g · · Score: 3, Informative

    Extended Window Manager Hints (or something like that, the letters don't match up)

    Anyway, basically it means that the WM is more or less compatable with GNOME or KDE.

    --
    "Who says nothing is impossible? Some people do it every day!" - Alfred E. Neuman
  23. Oblig. by PoprocksCk · · Score: 3, Funny

    In Soviet Russia, the window manages YOU!

  24. Re:Blackbox ... too late? by Jack+Action · · Score: 3, Informative

    Blackbox worked great on my old Duron box. Its as close as you can get to being in the console while in X.

    But literally yesterday, I was configuring X for a new system with an LCD monitor. My distro had the old version of Blackbox -- without anti-aliasing fonts (*gak*). I use the console most of the time to save my eyes. No anti-aliasing on a LCD monitor is almost as bad as using X on a old monitor.

    I did alot of hand-wringing over it -- I think fluxbox may have too much eye-candy -- but I switched.

    More power to Blackbox though, the concept is still the best.

  25. Re:What next? by PoprocksCk · · Score: 3, Informative

    What next? An update to linuxconf? An update to fvwm95?

    Linuxconf: Last release: 1.34r3 2005-01-18 12:08:47

    "Don't feed the trolls"

  26. Re:Blackbox is the best! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Believe it or not, I really did enjoy using CDE on my old Sun Ultras. It looked terrible, but the overall feel of the system was extremely solid and pleasent to work with. My only real complaint with it was how Sun added features by kit bashing command line utilities and Java programs into the WM. Would it have killed them to write a proper volume control instead of using the immature JMF control? Not to mention the *need* for a Winzip type of archive tool.

    Still, beggars can't be choosers, and CDE blew the hell out of early KDE and GNOME. :-)

  27. Define "small binary size"... by bebing · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is important to me as I'm running linux on a playstation 2. I use mwm which I've always liked since I first used it quite some time ago. The binary clocks in at 1985399 bytes. In my research I've compiled and tried many different wms, one being blackbox which clocked in at 7965606 bytes, about 4x the size of mwm. Maybe I didn't compile it with some minimalist options turned on? Don't get me wrong I feel blackbox is a great product, but so far mwm is the best fit for my sit.

    1. Re:Define "small binary size"... by k8to · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Small is wm2.

      jrodman@Skonnos:~ >ls -l $(which wm2)
      -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 63724 Dec 10 13:36 /usr/bin/wm2

      At 63724 bytes, it's less than a third of the binary size of mwm that you quote, and it doesn't link against any huge bloated and unpleasant motif library. In fact, it only uses libXext, and X11 on top of the usual stdc++, libm, libgcc, libc, libdl and ld-linux. in-memory size can be as little as 10k malloced on top of the 60k image.

      --
      -josh
  28. Apostriphication by LadyLucky · · Score: 4, Funny
    I for one would like to congratulate the article submitter in having possibly the first correct use of the apostrophe in the history of Slashdot.

    Very Good!

    --
    dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
    1. Re:Apostriphication by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Funny

      "I for one would like to congratulate the article submitter in having possibly the first correct use of the apostrophe in the history of Slashdot."

      Next up: Commas!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  29. BB for windows by BrookHarty · · Score: 5, Informative

    I like how I can use Blackbox for windows and use the same themes.
    http://www.bb4win.org/news.php

    People walk up and seem me using rxvt from cygwin and bb4win and they dont realize im in windows, till I open Exchange. :)

  30. There are two sides... by TerminaMorte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I keep seeing posts that complain that "Well, this is great if memory is a problem, but for me it isn't so here's a list of reasons why I wouldn't never use it..." Why post useful drivel like this? (Oh, right, slashdot...) If your machine can handle a heavy GUI, you're *probally* going to use KDE/Gnome (or maybe XFCE). If you use a computer that's less than 600mhz, you're probally going to use Blackbox, Openbox, Fluxbox, etc. Or, once again, maybe XFCE (It's sexy, isn't it? ;)) This is really great to see that they're trying to update the light WMs, while still letting them remain useful in the same way they (hopefully) will always be: A good way to revive old hardware w/o having to install Windows NT or 98.

  31. Lightweight is GOOD by Beolach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, I'm reading lots of comments here about how people have nice new computers with lots of RAM & fast CPUs, so they don't need to worry about memory footprint etc. I call BS. Just because you have good enough hardware to cope with bloatware is no reason to use bloatware. My desktop at home is an Athlon64 3200+ w/ 2 GiB RAM. It could handle any WM I choose to throw on it. I choose lightweight WMs (fluxbox, currently), and I will try the new blackbox. Not because I'm limited by my hardware, but because I prefer the clean design that is inherant in lightweight WMs. And I don't use or want many of the features and eyecandy in some of the heavier WMs, so there's no reason for me to use one, even though my hardware could handle it easily.

    Now, don't get me wrong, if you prefer KDE or Gnome or Enlightenment or whatever over blackbox, then that's fine; but don't use "I have good hardware" as a reason not to use a lightweight WM. Say "I like X, which lightweight WMs don't have" and I will respect you. Disagree, likely, but I will respect your opinion.

    --
    Join moola.com, play games to earn money.
  32. Re:Theme constraints? by Brandybuck · · Score: 3, Informative

    Of hand, does anyone know of a WM that's relaly easy to customize, but also very flexible?

    Easy and flexible are opposites, unfortunately. Something like Blackbox allows you to define a few gradients and call it finished, but you don't get a lot of flexibility. KWin allows you to do *anything*, but you have to write your own plugin. Towards the easy side you also have IceWM and Windowmaker, while towards the flexible side you have Metacity and Fvwm.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  33. Re:I'm a heretic! Burn me! by dkordik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    RAM? The main advantage here is that the files take up little *drive space*. This is optimal for something like a Live MiniCD/Flash drive distro that needs all the space available for killer packages.

  34. What do you mean, "about time"?! by thisisauniqueid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Where do you get off saying something like, "I for one think it's about time"? Did you contribute even a single line of code to get it to this point?
    Please show a little gratitude to the developers. They're volunteers, after all.

  35. Re:I'm a heretic! Burn me! by mackstann · · Score: 3, Informative
    It's easy to argue that something like Blackbox is small compared to Gnome or KDE, but if you compare it to other actual window managers, it's not really all that special. Metacity and E are the only WMs that I can think of off hand that might be called "big."

    A fun comparison I did

  36. Re:This is not a troll... by grammar+fascist · · Score: 3, Funny

    Blackbox is extremely stable, has no footprint...

    No footprint? That's about as amazing and cool as write-only memory!

    --
    I got my Linux laptop at System76.
  37. Re:I'm a heretic! Burn me! by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fluxbox is a window manager. Gnome is a desktop environment.

    Please stop confusing the two. You can, quite legitimately, use fluxbox as your Gnome window manager (though its support for Gnome desktop APIs is only in its early stages), so saying that "Gnome was just a pig" doesn't say anything about fluxbox and its comparative performance.

    Metacity, on the other hand (Gnome's default window manager) may or may not compare favorably to Fluxbox (I haven't tried a bare Metacity to compare against), but in using just a window manager, you lose all of the benefits of a desktop environment: session management, cross-application configuration parameters, uniform high-level drag and drop, etc.

    You may not care about these things, but they are the core of a modern desktop environment, and have NOTHING to do with what window manager you select.