I would try a few Plasma based tiling scripts before switching to anything like Sway or i3. You’ll get a good idea of whether it’s for you. Later on if you find you need more control over the tiling you could switch to a dedicated tiling window manager.
I’m using Karousel in Plasma which is scrollable tiling. You can install and enable it like so:
Go to System Settings > Apps & Windows > Window Management > KWin Scripts > select Get New… > In search enter Karousel and wait for it to show up > select Install > select the latest version (as of now karousel-0-9-4.tar.gz).
There is a companion desktop effect that also needs to be installed like so:
Go to System Settings > Apps & Windows > Window Management > Desktop Effects > select Get New… > enter Geometry Change in search > select Install > select the latest version (as of now kwin4-effect-geometry-change-1.3.tar.gz).
Karousel and Geometry Change have configuration options and Karousel also has keyboard shortcuts (view here) which you may need to update to your liking. I don’t have a need to configure anything in Geometry Change as the default animation settings are fine. For Karousel I tend to adjust the various spacing and gaps options along with making sure the shortcuts I want are configured. That link above has a short video of what Karousel looks like in action.
You can get Gentoo up and running pretty quickly by following the handbook. From memory it’s easy to miss one or two clear instructions because the styling of the handbook can add more eye-catching weight to the explanation than the actual commands. So be sure to re-read areas where things don’t seem to working out.
Gentoo also has a binary repo if you don’t plan to stray from whatever installation profile defaults you start off with.
I can’t confirm a simple server install of Gentoo is somehow more lean than any other distribution.
I’ve used gentoo-install with success previously although I don’t know how up to date it is.
Cool. I don’t know if there is a way to do what you asked. You might be able to do something similar by subscribing to all the communities you want to keep in touch with so that those communities show up in Subscribed/Home. That way All will be unfiltered and you can check it out every now and then to see if there’s anything new, while focusing on the stuff you like in Subscribed/Home.
First things first, did you unblock the community and can you see the comments now?
No problem. When you’re logged in via the browser do you see the comments?
Try logging in via browser and checking Account or Profile.
If you haven’t blocked anyone, any communities or instances then check you have both English and Undefined selected in language settings (along with other languages you want to see posts/comments in).
Most unexpected reference I’ve ever seen.
Hope they don’t forget Janine Turner.
Is this an early or late April Fools?
When I got to the second set of most wanted/least wanted I gave up. Maybe that was the intent behind the design of the survey.
I feel like it’s eyes shouldn’t be where they are. Uncomfortable.
Floating heads in spaaaaace. Movie posters still suck.
Derivative of Gentoo by the founder of Gentoo.
I’m curious, how does snoozing help? First I’ve heard of the concept so I’m wondering if I’m missing out.
I found this addon for Thunderbird. Not sure if it’s the kind of thing that will help.
Shin Godzilla > Godzilla Minus One.
I haven’t been able to find evidence that NASA posted anything with this headline. It seems to come from a jpost article that links to this Facebook post which does not mention elephants.
What is it that you want to happen? Sorry it is a bit unclear in your post.
You can block instances in Voyager. I don’t know if it blocks everything though, like comments from a blocked instance account etc.