This is a pretty neat idea, and shows that maybe a desktop environment could be a lot more flexible than we're used to if it was based on something flexible. Not exactly counter intuitive.
I'd like to see how complex a CEF-based Wayland compositor would be in comparison.
How about using Godot instead of CEF? It has a pretty full-featured UI system.
While you're at it, go on a huge tangent writing a library that allows one implementation to work as both an X11 and Wayland compositor.
Actually why stop there? Make said library also compile to a full screen Windows and Macos application that somehow renders the contents of windows to textures and does event handing etc. that way you can write your desktop environment once and use it everywhere.
This is based on the Chromium Embedded Framework. I've always been surprised this kind of framework was not encouraged for Firefox by Mozilla (I've read they were even against it).
If I disable "font-family: Atkinson" it comes back, so guessing it's font related. I do see the two .woff files load in the Network tab. Interestingly, when I preview either font file, I see the sample of the font (AaBbCc etc.) in a flash for just milliseconds, and then it disappears and I see nothing.
When I was younger I thought of replacing most of the OS with a browser since that is how I used it. but this is weird and not in a good way. Maybe using Firefox would feel better.
> It’s quite a bit easier to tweak CSS constants, and JS snippets then it is to change style embedded already in a long standing modern desktop/window manager. So let’s bring the web to the desktop and have a browser control the system.
Jesus, bro, you can’t say stuff like this here.
Half of HN is going to have a stroke and will end up sounding like Hodor – native, natuve, ntve.
This is a pretty neat idea, and shows that maybe a desktop environment could be a lot more flexible than we're used to if it was based on something flexible. Not exactly counter intuitive.
I'd like to see how complex a CEF-based Wayland compositor would be in comparison.
How about using Godot instead of CEF? It has a pretty full-featured UI system.
So many possibilities.
While you're at it, go on a huge tangent writing a library that allows one implementation to work as both an X11 and Wayland compositor.
Actually why stop there? Make said library also compile to a full screen Windows and Macos application that somehow renders the contents of windows to textures and does event handing etc. that way you can write your desktop environment once and use it everywhere.
I've gone crazy with power.
This is based on the Chromium Embedded Framework. I've always been surprised this kind of framework was not encouraged for Firefox by Mozilla (I've read they were even against it).
Before they got rid of XUL, this was the sort of thing possible with it.
They used to have XULRunner long ago.
Not sure why, but the text doesn't appear in Chrome 109: https://imgur.com/a/QyIdfax
If I disable "font-family: Atkinson" it comes back, so guessing it's font related. I do see the two .woff files load in the Network tab. Interestingly, when I preview either font file, I see the sample of the font (AaBbCc etc.) in a flash for just milliseconds, and then it disappears and I see nothing.
I'm interested in a how-to which accomplishes the absolute opposite result.
here you go
https://plan9.io/magic/man2html/4/webfs
1) uninstall Chrome
2) install it once a year when some backwards website won’t work with anything else.
3) go to 1)
When I was younger I thought of replacing most of the OS with a browser since that is how I used it. but this is weird and not in a good way. Maybe using Firefox would feel better.
I believe the earlier versions of Chrome/Chromium OS took this to the logical extreme.
https://www.technologyreview.com/2009/11/19/208062/google-gi...
This reminds me of the Windows 8 version they had for a short time where you got a full-blown ChromeOS "clone" when launching the Metro version: https://www.howtogeek.com/179980/how-to-use-the-chrome-os-de...
On ChromeOS, Chrome is the window manager, compositor and desktop session all in one.
Windows 98 Active Desktop vibes :)
Pyro Desktop! But with Chrome instead of Firefox. https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2007/07/exper... https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39541
Sounds like a more performant and cleaner solution than TFA.
I looked around the Windows skin source but I guess I'm too dumb for it because this line makes no sense to me https://github.com/FoxMoss/dote-dreamland-win95-example/blob...
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> It’s quite a bit easier to tweak CSS constants, and JS snippets then it is to change style embedded already in a long standing modern desktop/window manager. So let’s bring the web to the desktop and have a browser control the system.
Jesus, bro, you can’t say stuff like this here.
Half of HN is going to have a stroke and will end up sounding like Hodor – native, natuve, ntve.