This is one of the reasons I like the OpenBSD and suckless projects. There are solutions that are technically correct, but are overengineered.
That's (as shown in my sample prompt) one great thing I've been using LLMs for: making GUIs for arcane Linux-based OS/userland settings that I have no interest in doing "sudo gedit yadda yadda" or learning man pages for. It's been 30+ years, we deserve a better desktop experience.
I've used suckless packages in the past, but it feels to me too close the GNOME/Apple way of giving zero settings and having opinionated defaults whose opinions do not ring well for me. I have zero desire to change my shortcuts/hotkeys to something random devs chose based on their past computer experience, mostly unix-based. Muscle memory > *.
I was pointing out that a simpler solution exists. I prefer simple solutions, because I want to test whatever idea I have in real world situation first before I go for a more complete one. Kinda like doodling before committing to do a sketch (or spend weeks doing a painting).
> It's been 30+ years, we deserve a better desktop experience
That desktop experience would need to be like smalltalk (where it’s trivial to modify the gui). The nice power of Unix is having the userland being actually a userland. Meaning you can design a system for your workflow and let the computer take care of that. Current desktop environment doesn’t allows for that kind of flexibility.
Also it’s the nature of unix that makes such basic utilities possible (and building them with raw xlib or tcl is easier than gtk). Imagine doing the same on macOS or Windows where everything is behind an opaque database where some other process fancies itself as its owner.
I mean, no comment