MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
During my increasingly less free time, I tried, in antiX and Mx other WM: Enlightenment (E. for short).
There are many things that particular WM does right: small memory footprint (some 50Mb less than Fluxbox!), manages desktop icons and wallpapers by itself, has composition, lots of eye candy (like window previews) and it's very simple to add icons to the toolbar or the preferred applications menu. It's gorgeous, if you happen to like eye candy and animations- looks like a full blown DE (like XFCE, but with even more eye candy). It has a amazing and blazing fast app and file searcher!
I do recommend E. if you want a even lower resources usage, and like eye candy...
But... I went back to MXFB- I feel like it's a bit like my baby- I tweaked until It looks like I wanted it to look (I posted a screen shot, a while ago, I don't even need to run the Dock- it's great, but I want to conserve my RAM - my OS looks a Kind of MX XFCE with a bottom toolbar) and has all the the functionality I wanted it to have (for window previews I use skippy-XD; for app and file searcher, the excellent and fast Drill; and have a menu generator that does not even need to be installed!).
MXFB it's rock solid- the icons don't go missing out of the blue, like they sometimes do in E. Nor do "gadgets" jump around randomly when you are moving them.
Fluxbox does look way more spartan, with very little eye candy- and even uses a bit more RAM- but, when I put an icon on screen, it stays there, allowing me to launch my apps as fast as possible.
What are OS's and WM and DE's suppose to do? Allow users to run the apps they need, no matter if it's for work or play!
It's not even particulary hard to make MXFB have a fully working menu - it costs only a line in the menu (in my case "All Categories") and I can use all the apps I want from there, without using XFCE's launcher. I even wrote a small script to put (or remove) my prefered apps on the start of menu!
So, despite having some minor disagreements with Jerry's default design choices, I do believe MXFB, is, in fact one of the (lower resources) system available out there, while providing a ample array of tools and almost infinite application choices.
Well done Jerry, and the rest of the Dev team!
P.
There are many things that particular WM does right: small memory footprint (some 50Mb less than Fluxbox!), manages desktop icons and wallpapers by itself, has composition, lots of eye candy (like window previews) and it's very simple to add icons to the toolbar or the preferred applications menu. It's gorgeous, if you happen to like eye candy and animations- looks like a full blown DE (like XFCE, but with even more eye candy). It has a amazing and blazing fast app and file searcher!
I do recommend E. if you want a even lower resources usage, and like eye candy...
But... I went back to MXFB- I feel like it's a bit like my baby- I tweaked until It looks like I wanted it to look (I posted a screen shot, a while ago, I don't even need to run the Dock- it's great, but I want to conserve my RAM - my OS looks a Kind of MX XFCE with a bottom toolbar) and has all the the functionality I wanted it to have (for window previews I use skippy-XD; for app and file searcher, the excellent and fast Drill; and have a menu generator that does not even need to be installed!).
MXFB it's rock solid- the icons don't go missing out of the blue, like they sometimes do in E. Nor do "gadgets" jump around randomly when you are moving them.
Fluxbox does look way more spartan, with very little eye candy- and even uses a bit more RAM- but, when I put an icon on screen, it stays there, allowing me to launch my apps as fast as possible.
What are OS's and WM and DE's suppose to do? Allow users to run the apps they need, no matter if it's for work or play!
It's not even particulary hard to make MXFB have a fully working menu - it costs only a line in the menu (in my case "All Categories") and I can use all the apps I want from there, without using XFCE's launcher. I even wrote a small script to put (or remove) my prefered apps on the start of menu!
So, despite having some minor disagreements with Jerry's default design choices, I do believe MXFB, is, in fact one of the (lower resources) system available out there, while providing a ample array of tools and almost infinite application choices.
Well done Jerry, and the rest of the Dev team!
P.
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
Another popular WM is Openbox, very similar to fluxbox; a lighter, seemingly more useful WM, would be JWM, or IceWM; each to their own. 
(My personal favourite is Fluxbox as in AntiX.)

(My personal favourite is Fluxbox as in AntiX.)
(FOSS, Linux, & BSD since 1999)
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
@ppc: could you please explain a bit more about the menu generator - and script to add/remove preferred apps on the startmenu.PPC wrote: Mon Jul 27, 2020 6:30 am<snip>
...and has all the the functionality I wanted it to have (for window previews I use skippy-XD; for app and file searcher, the excellent and fast Drill; and have a menu generator that does not even need to be installed!).
<snip>
... It's not even particulary hard to make MXFB have a fully working menu - it costs only a line in the menu (in my case "All Categories") and I can use all the apps I want from there, without using XFCE's launcher. I even wrote a small script to put (or remove) my prefered apps on the start of menu!
...
would love to see how you are doing that, thanks!
Sony Vaio VPCF23P (2011), Intel Core i7-2670, 6gb RAM, 240gb SSD, MX-Linux 23 based Fluxbox v/1.3.7+
Lenovo Thinkpad L560 (2016), Intel Core i5-6200, 16gb RAM, 240gb SSD, Devuan Daedalus based Fluxbox v/1.3.7+
Lenovo Thinkpad L560 (2016), Intel Core i5-6200, 16gb RAM, 240gb SSD, Devuan Daedalus based Fluxbox v/1.3.7+
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
@PPC: thanks for the good words, and for your helpful ongoing critique during development.
Production: MX-23 Xfce, AMD FX-4130 Quad-Core, GeForce GT 630/PCIe/SSE2, 16 GB, SSD 120 GB, Data 1TB
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
- dolphin_oracle
- Developer
- Posts: 22657
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 12:17 pm
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
Its one of the things I like about my antiX-fluxbox setup is that once you get done customizing, you can really make fluxbox sing. I always map Super_L to bring up the fluxbox menu, so that thing I don't need desktop space to right click on and I can full screen my apps. (keys file, Super_L: rootMenu)PPC wrote: Mon Jul 27, 2020 6:30 am During my increasingly less free time, I tried, in antiX and Mx other WM: Enlightenment (E. for short).
There are many things that particular WM does right: small memory footprint (some 50Mb less than Fluxbox!), manages desktop icons and wallpapers by itself, has composition, lots of eye candy (like window previews) and it's very simple to add icons to the toolbar or the preferred applications menu. It's gorgeous, if you happen to like eye candy and animations- looks like a full blown DE (like XFCE, but with even more eye candy). It has a amazing and blazing fast app and file searcher!
I do recommend E. if you want a even lower resources usage, and like eye candy...
But... I went back to MXFB- I feel like it's a bit like my baby- I tweaked until It looks like I wanted it to look (I posted a screen shot, a while ago, I don't even need to run the Dock- it's great, but I want to conserve my RAM - my OS looks a Kind of MX XFCE with a bottom toolbar) and has all the the functionality I wanted it to have (for window previews I use skippy-XD; for app and file searcher, the excellent and fast Drill; and have a menu generator that does not even need to be installed!).
MXFB it's rock solid- the icons don't go missing out of the blue, like they sometimes do in E. Nor do "gadgets" jump around randomly when you are moving them.
Fluxbox does look way more spartan, with very little eye candy- and even uses a bit more RAM- but, when I put an icon on screen, it stays there, allowing me to launch my apps as fast as possible.
What are OS's and WM and DE's suppose to do? Allow users to run the apps they need, no matter if it's for work or play!
It's not even particulary hard to make MXFB have a fully working menu - it costs only a line in the menu (in my case "All Categories") and I can use all the apps I want from there, without using XFCE's launcher. I even wrote a small script to put (or remove) my prefered apps on the start of menu!
So, despite having some minor disagreements with Jerry's default design choices, I do believe MXFB, is, in fact one of the (lower resources) system available out there, while providing a ample array of tools and almost infinite application choices.
Well done Jerry, and the rest of the Dev team!
P.
I would like some more info on that menu setup though. I agree, having applications on the fluxbox menu is what mx-fb setup is missing.
http://www.youtube.com/runwiththedolphin
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
Well, the menu does have "All apps" which brings up the full Whisker menu so for me they're not missing at all. Just sort of compacted.
Production: MX-23 Xfce, AMD FX-4130 Quad-Core, GeForce GT 630/PCIe/SSE2, 16 GB, SSD 120 GB, Data 1TB
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
- dolphin_oracle
- Developer
- Posts: 22657
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 12:17 pm
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
well, it brings up xfce4-appfinder in full mode. I like it, and it can stand separate from Xfce thanks to Xfce's modularity, but you still end up with one menu for fluxbox control and a second app for actual app launching. And it exposes Xfce applications that don't work in fluxbox. Logout for instance.Jerry3904 wrote: Mon Jul 27, 2020 10:32 am Well, the menu does have "All apps" which brings up the full Whisker menu so for me they're not missing at all. Just sort of compacted.
http://www.youtube.com/runwiththedolphin
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
Therefore I like this community and this forum, the tips that come up at the same time and that you would never have thought of on your own, but that make the work easier and also meet (my) aesthetic demands
Whether it's the rounded corners, the idea of basic tiling windows or the menu to put on the super_L key.
I'm almost a bit nostalgic that after 5 years of using xfxe I'm switching so painlessly to Fluxbox ;-)
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
Whether it's the rounded corners, the idea of basic tiling windows or the menu to put on the super_L key.
I'm almost a bit nostalgic that after 5 years of using xfxe I'm switching so painlessly to Fluxbox ;-)
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
my working horse Desktop AMD Ryzen 9 3900x, 32GB Ram // SSD ... enough
mx-fluxbox, what else?
In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments.
There are consequences.
my wallpaper gallery
mx-fluxbox, what else?
In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments.
There are consequences.
my wallpaper gallery
- dolphin_oracle
- Developer
- Posts: 22657
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 12:17 pm
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
FWIW, instead of setting Super_L to the rootmenu like I don on antiX, on MX I have Super_L set to the xfce4-appfinder for application launching.
http://www.youtube.com/runwiththedolphin
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 4 - MX-23
FYI: mx "test" repo is not the same thing as debian testing repo.
Live system help document: https://mxlinux.org/wiki/help-antix-live-usb-system/
Re: MX Fluxbox versus other Window Managers and Desktop Envioroments
I do not use the xfce4-appfinder (anymore), I have everything in the menu.
The xfce4-appfinder occupies about 55 MB RAM after the first call, most appimages don't create a desktop file and I have to enter the wine programs manually into the menu, so the appfinder is of no use to me anyway.
So I once generated a menu with all programs that can be called with fbmenugen and integrated it as a submenu in my fluxbox menu. Because it looks so nice with icons. I don't mind that there are still a few duplicate entries and I still have to sort a bit.
Except the taskbar, the wallpaper and sometimes conky my desktop is empty. I like that :-)
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
The xfce4-appfinder occupies about 55 MB RAM after the first call, most appimages don't create a desktop file and I have to enter the wine programs manually into the menu, so the appfinder is of no use to me anyway.
So I once generated a menu with all programs that can be called with fbmenugen and integrated it as a submenu in my fluxbox menu. Because it looks so nice with icons. I don't mind that there are still a few duplicate entries and I still have to sort a bit.
Except the taskbar, the wallpaper and sometimes conky my desktop is empty. I like that :-)
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
my working horse Desktop AMD Ryzen 9 3900x, 32GB Ram // SSD ... enough
mx-fluxbox, what else?
In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments.
There are consequences.
my wallpaper gallery
mx-fluxbox, what else?
In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments.
There are consequences.
my wallpaper gallery