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Xfce, LXDE, GNOME3 Desktops Running On Ubuntu Mir Via XMir

An anonymous reader writes "Through the use of XMir, a translation layer for running legacy X11 applications atop Ubuntu's forthcoming Mir display server, the GNOME Shell, Xfce, and LXDE desktops now run on this X.Org Server alternative. With XMir, the traditional window managers are still running while Mir treats these desktops as a single window."

5 of 162 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Hello by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thousands of distros, tens of DE's and WM's, lots of different graphical toolkits, tons of libraries with significant overlapping functions, tons of system utils that do similar things, 6 or 7 common http servers, but TWO graphics servers? FRAGMENTATION! It's all gonna fly apart!

    You dumbass.

  2. Re:FOSS overload by The+Mighty+Buzzard · · Score: 5, Funny

    Truth. He is indeed a master baiter.

    --
    Violence is like duct tape. If it doesn't solve the problem, you didn't use enough.
  3. pictures of all desktops mentioned running on XMir by bmullan.mail · · Score: 5, Informative
  4. Re:Multiple Displays? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Been using X since the 80s, and mutil monitors on X since somewhere in the late 90s, both with the displays all on the same box, and later, with some of the displays running on separate computers using xdmx.

    Using Xorg.conf for xinerama config, while maybe not ideal for grandma, wasn't terrible, and you only did it once. But, for folks like you, there is now xrandr which you can setup via xorg.conf, use your WMs hooks into it to do it all gui-ish, or just run shell commands to setup your multi-monitor layout (since it would be trivial to write [hell you could do it in a short shell script], there is probably a daemon available that will auto add a monitor when plugged in and remove it when unplugged, but I am not familiar with it if it exists).

    As for not being able to move a window between monitors, you are doing it wrong. Depending upon your window manager, and how *you* set things up, you can have independent displays (uncommon, but apparently how you set things up), one big shared desktop like windows and mac (gnome, kde, etc.), or, something smarter, a kind of hybrid between the two where things act like a unified desktop when you want them to, but you can switch virtual desktops independently per each physical display-- which is *very* nice (e17).

    You can drag windows between displays even when the displays are on different boxes (xdmx). Unfortunately xdmx only works with xinerama, and newer graphics cards only work with xrandr, so in a crappy transition period now for this. But, if you ever want to setup a video wall with 100 monitors acting as one unified display, xdmx is probably the only game in town.

      If you want to use MS Windows, nobody is stopping you, but please don't spread FUD.

  5. Re:FOSS overload by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Had sex once.  Got bored halfway through.  Went back to my Linux box.  Much more interesting than trying to find nontrivial words in a language with only two words, In and Out, and one form of punctuation.