I've never seen something so wonderful and horrible at the same time. Let's hope it's used for commercial displays more and desktops less.
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If I recall from the original thread, it came from someone doing it because they realized they could, because it was implemented with flexibility, and not because anyone ever specifically thought it would be a good idea.
https://sprocketfox.io/xssfox/2021/12/02/xrandr/
Basically mapping what the OS thinks of as the screen, where the display renders that virtual screen, how a touchpad maps to it, how a touchscreen on the display maps to them both can be complicated.
Everything basically figures itself out now, but they still use the tools that happily accept a transformation matrix to changes things around.
My hope is to see a rotating monitor setup with a display that holds still.
I wonder if this could be done on Wayland without a custom compositor
I don't even know how this would be useful for commercial displays.
Maybe for some very stylistic installations that are more for looks than practicality?
this makes me wonder if you could have a sensor for monitor orientation and have a dynamic ui that would adjust to keep the windows parallel to the ground no matter how it was spun.
Windmill spinning monitors for everyone!
@snooggums @southernwolf @HubertManne That sounds like one of those abstract art pieces you'd see in a museum lol
i'm just imagining a monitor that's also a fan
that's an amazing idea
Ive seen this exact demo working for a product before, but it never made it into the released version. So doable, but more trouble than its really worth I think.
On one hand you would have an even larger screen real estate, on the other you now have two overlapping refresh rates.
Just use Angular?
This comes off as one of those "we asked if we could, but never asked if we should" kinds of things...
This makes me dizzy for some reason @. @
This hurts