I see there is a good number of windowing shells that replace the original windowing infrastructure of Windows.
I think they are related to both the old X-windows of the DOS era and to today's X server used in Unix.
I have the impression that very few people use them, and just for the hell of it & the looks (nothing wrong with that) as opposed to for the purpose of improving performance and/or stability.
Am I right?
Or are there shells that are substantially lighter / faster / less sickly than the stock "windows" in "Windows"?
TIA!
Filippo / spamhog
Computer Victim (as in "fashion victim" - Milan, North Poldavia - 40% WinME, 40% Linux (Debian, Libranet, Vector, Lycoris), 20% Win98, trace amounts of Win2k, xBSD, QNX
I think they are related to both the old X-windows of the DOS era and to today's X server used in Unix.
I have the impression that very few people use them, and just for the hell of it & the looks (nothing wrong with that) as opposed to for the purpose of improving performance and/or stability.
Am I right?
Or are there shells that are substantially lighter / faster / less sickly than the stock "windows" in "Windows"?
TIA!
Filippo / spamhog
Computer Victim (as in "fashion victim" - Milan, North Poldavia - 40% WinME, 40% Linux (Debian, Libranet, Vector, Lycoris), 20% Win98, trace amounts of Win2k, xBSD, QNX