komorebi v0.1.29 - new status bar built in Rust with egui
komorebi v0.1.29 - new status bar built in Rust with egui
komorebi v0.1.29 - new status bar built in Rust with egui
how do you fix an issue you can't reproduce? a case study
Building a GUI for my Tiling Window Manager in Pure Rust with egui and eframe
Open Source Financial Sponsorship Breakdown for 2023
Selectively Using Service Modules from NixOS Unstable
Why Komorebi Can't Use Windows Virtual Desktops
Satounki - Temporary elevated access management as a self-hosted service
Satounki - Temporary elevated access management as a self-hosted service
Win32 Window Focus Prevention Deep Dive
It's Pretty Easy to Build Your Own LinkTree with Analytics Using Hugo and Cloudflare Pages
Handling Secrets in NixOS: An Overview (git-crypt, agenix, sops-nix, and when to use them)
Using Rust, Chrome and NixOS to Take Headless Screenshots for Social Sharing
Rewriting a Chumsky Parser By Hand in Rust
Working Through Crafting Interpreters (Java) in Rust
Sensible $WORDCHARS for Most Developers
Dynamic vs. Static Config for My Tiling Window Manager
Ditching Docker for Local Development
Komorebi Quickstart Tutorial | Windows 11 Tiling Window Manager
Invitational Strictly - International Lindy Hop Championships 2023
c/tilingwindowmanagers - A place to talk about and share media related to tiling window managers!
I'm not an open source guy - redistribution restrictions (as well as restrictions for corporate and commercial use) are non negotiable for me. You're welcome to learn from the source code, and anyone is free to fork and make whatever changes they want for personal use.
The license history for this project goes MIT > PolyForm Strict > Forked PolyForm Strict to explicitly allow changes for personal use (named as the "Komorebi" license as changing the text of PolyForm licenses requires removal of the PolyForm trademark).
If anyone is interested in the story behind the initial MIT > PolyForm Strict switch, the tl;dr is that I decided to explicitly restrict redistribution after someone did a rename of the project and started selling it on the Windows Store. A lot has happened since then that has changed my views on open source in general.
OSI licenses are not "standard" by any stretch of the imagination, and I personally don't want to have anything to do with licenses which would permit the use of my software in the mass murder of children.