Comment by 🐙 norayr
i try to use lagrange for even http pages, i use it with http to gemini proxy.
whatever opens sort of in lagrange, i am satisfied with that.
only whatever not opens, i run in a web browser.
8 hours ago
Poll Results
1. GUI
███████████████████▁▁▁▁▁ 81%
2. TUI
██▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 10%
3. CLI
██▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 10%
52 votes were cast.
5 Later Comments ↓
and i do use lagrange because i open looooots of tabs and windows.
i tend to sort tabs relevant to the same topics in the same window.
then i distribute those lagrange windows to different workspaces.
and since lagrange remembers workspace in x11, i can after restart get the same state of windows on different x11 workspaces.
I use all three at various times. My preferred Android client is deedum. On some of my computers I primarily run Kristall, and on others I primarily run Offpunk. I also have a Bash alias for one-off browsing and archiving documents, which gets some use across all of my devices.
@fab Oh, of course. That's a nice design goal as well, and I don't think the making of GUI clients would hinder that much. I could also imagine navigating being quicker after getting used to keyboard in a terminal more. I personally like using a mouse more though, and if I had a terminal based system would probably want something where I can use a mouse like normal with right clicking and copy and pasting, but also able to just hide the mouse in the corner and use it as normal if I wanted.
There is no good reason for worse keyboard controls in a GUI, except that GUI users and coders love that dumb mouse...
@stack Not once did I argue for worse keyboard controls in a GUI, though. You should be able to navigate with anything used to control your computer. I feel like having a hotkey to swap from short cuts on the desktop and the task bar on a simplistic, say, cinnamon type desktop and pressing enter to 'click' things could be fine. That would still raise the question of how well you'd navigate other GUI applications however.
Original Post
Do you browse the Geminispace with a GUI, TUI, or CLI client? — CLI = run in terminal with parameters to load a single page and immediately and automatically exit upon output, TUI = run in terminal once to load and navigate many pages in succession