FVWM-95 (2001)
Posted by mghackerlady 16 hours ago
Comments
Comment by BeetleB 15 hours ago
You can see some (fairly old!) screenshots here: https://fvwm-themes.sourceforge.net/screenshots/
Glad to see it's still around.
Edit: Here's the thread (Gentoo Forums): https://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=80517
The thread ran a total of 121 pages over 7 years.
Comment by flopsamjetsam 11 hours ago
Comment by stevekemp 13 hours ago
My linux days started around 95/96, and I was always using low-resource environments due to necessity. Other than FVWM95 the other system I recall using for a long long time was IceWM which was something I switched to around 1999/2000.
Comment by incanus77 16 hours ago
Comment by MisterTea 15 hours ago
Comment by CGMthrowaway 15 hours ago
Comment by bayindirh 14 hours ago
Comment by sombragris 14 hours ago
https://slackbuilds.org/repository/15.0/desktop/fvwm95/
I like the Win95 aesthetic, but I like a close relative, KDE1, better; and I have configured my Plasma 6 setup along these lines. Screenshot: https://imgur.com/a/Q9Gfs08
Back into FVWM, Slackware also has a SlackBuild for the next-gen fvwm3. FVWM configurability could be amazing, although it can be a challenge.
Comment by LargoLasskhyfv 11 hours ago
Meanwhile, Plasmas Breeze (light) does all of that for me, again. One could maybe depart from the breeze window decorations, and exchange them for 'Klassy', they can 'fit', there is much to change, chose from. I'm trying them out at the moment. The thing with Breeze is, many other apps have presets for that also, like LibreOffice, which leads to even more visual consistency :-)
My desktop is blank, a mix between soft pastel yellow and 'manila' paper. No icons, widgets, clocks, weather. I don't care about CPU or Network speed there. I wouldn't see them anyway, since I tend to have windows maximized. If something would be wrong Kget or Ktorrent would make themselves known, which they won't ;-> CPU speeds suffice, even if mostly clocked down to 800Mhz :-)
My 'taskbar' is at the top, only 24px high. I switch between 3 by 3 virtual desktops by either using that too small (for that arrangement, it should grow a little when hovering the pointer over it) widget in the taskbar, or by jamming the mousepointer into one of the four corners, which makes that 'expose'-like thing appear.
Comment by sombragris 6 hours ago
StormClouds: https://store.kde.org/p/1001459
Steel (no longer shipped by default, but still available at the KDE Store): https://store.kde.org/p/1311274
As for the monitors, I have them because sometimes I have issues with CPU speed (due to a hardware quirk of my laptop) and the network connection is kinda iffy at the time.
Comment by LargoLasskhyfv 3 hours ago
That's different from what most laptops do, or fiddling with xgamma, or one of its frontends, using 'redshift', etc.
Even at brightest sunshine I don't go over 55% brightness, otherwise during the day, between 38% to 44%, at night just 20%, with contrast always two below these settings, or any I may use in between.
Despite all this, pictures look just right, even if I visit sites for calibration.
Comment by anthk 1 hour ago
Comment by jonhohle 16 hours ago
This looks a little too Windows 95, but the dock is a nice reminder that it’s X Windows.
Comment by alan-crowe 13 hours ago
$ pkg info fvwm
fvwm-2.6.9_4
Name : fvwm
Version : 2.6.9_4
Installed on : Mon Dec 8 02:01:51 2025 GMT
Origin : x11-wm/fvwm2
Architecture : FreeBSD:15:amd64
Very happy with it :-)Comment by jmclnx 8 hours ago
Comment by signa11 4 hours ago
i for one have migrated to fvwm3 (https://github.com/fvwmorg/fvwm3) almost everywhere i can. i don't think i am ever switching to anything else. reason: nothing better exists :o) not for the lack of trying mind you !
heck, even at work, where i log into a aws machine, i have it running with x-forwarding over an ssh session (using x2go) from within my mac. it looks something like this: https://ibb.co/DHYbM45J
unfortunately, i just realized, that on github, my config is not up to date, will update in a couple of days.
i would be remiss to not mention my huge thanks (fwiw) to mr. thomas-adam the current maintainer + project-lead of fvwm3. thank you !
ps-01: for folks getting into it, this: https://www.zensites.net/fvwm/guide/index.html is not-too-shabby a launch point.
ps-02: deep wiki has fvwm3 indexed here: https://deepwiki.com/fvwmorg/fvwm3
Comment by pjmlp 14 hours ago
By then I was already into other window managers.
Comment by Agingcoder 10 hours ago
Comment by pjmlp 2 hours ago
Comment by sombragris 14 hours ago
Comment by pjmlp 13 hours ago
While you may get the Look, you will never get the Feel.
Comment by guestbest 15 hours ago
Comment by LargoLasskhyfv 11 hours ago
Comment by d1l 14 hours ago
https://github.com/zy/zy-fvwm/blob/master/fvwmrc/taviso.fvwm...
Someone made a full cde style desktop with fvwm: https://github.com/NsCDE/NsCDE
It’s too bad tech seems so much to take away this kind of configurability in the name of “we know better”. There’s so much to be said for software that can last so long, as opposed to the constant treadmill of forced updates.
Fuck gnome eternally for destroying gtk and fuck Wayland.
Comment by erickhill 16 hours ago
That page even looks a tad dated for 2001!
Comment by kristopolous 8 hours ago
Comment by iku 14 hours ago
P.S. Oh, there is the official Qvwm page: https://sourceforge.net/projects/qvwm/files/qvwm/
Comment by asveikau 13 hours ago
I don't recall what was broken, but it was a few random things. I also added xrender image scaling on the window decorations, because they were hardcoded to a size that was tiny on modern DPI.
Comment by Narishma 13 hours ago
A C++ GUI toolkit with the Windows 95 look and feel.
Comment by dvh 14 hours ago
I don't update OS to relearn basic controls every 2 years, I update OS to get latest versions of apps.
Comment by bayindirh 14 hours ago
KDE is a powerhouse. I probably replace 10-15 applications just by using what's built-in to that.
Comment by irdc 16 hours ago
Comment by itomato 16 hours ago
The last time I revisited one of these old X projects, I wound up wasting time with libraries that have been deprecated for a decade or more.
Comment by mrspuratic 14 hours ago
Comment by BastienSANTE 15 hours ago
It's incredible how much charm there was in these interfaces, specifically in the bitmap fonts. Were GUI applications more or less graphically diverse than now ?
Comment by jandrese 14 hours ago
Comment by anthk 13 hours ago
You don't need to know Spanish, the screenshots speak from thelselves.
Comment by Nullmoment 15 hours ago
Comment by sevensor 13 hours ago
Comment by hackthemack 16 hours ago
I think the html editors of the time defaulted to some of style we now find quaint/quirky.
Comment by thesuitonym 13 hours ago
This style was a popular choice because it was easy to write, and could be displayed by just about any web browser. Compatibility and low resource usage was important back then.
Comment by phpnode 12 hours ago
Comment by thesuitonym 11 hours ago
Comment by irdc 16 hours ago
Comment by LocalH 15 hours ago
Comment by fragmede 15 hours ago
Comment by gldrk 15 hours ago
Comment by fragmede 11 hours ago
Comment by tracker1 14 hours ago
Comment by ptx 13 hours ago
Comment by gatane 12 hours ago
Comment by xenospn 11 hours ago
Comment by deafpolygon 15 hours ago
Comment by rgreekguy 3 hours ago
There is still some use for lightweight even in today. You make better use of your memory/resources in some application, than in something so fundamental.
Comment by bandrami 13 hours ago
Comment by anthk 15 hours ago
Usage:
xmkmf -a
make
Test: export LD_PRELOAD=./libXaw95.so.8.0
xcalcComment by michaelcampbell 13 hours ago
Comment by ajross 16 hours ago
It's funny how quickly things were moving at the time. In the mid 90's, GUI design elements were still in their infancy. Even basic stuff like "what do windows do?" was in flux. Traditional X window managers hadn't settled on anything like a regular usage model: twm was still in regular use, fvwm mostly cloned its UI, Sun was still defaulting to OpenWindows which was pretty and clever but sort of an evolutionary dead end, and other commercial unixes were running Motif which was a lot like a monochrome Windows 3.1 that used too many pixels. Macs were still stuck in the only-one-foreground-app-is-enough model with System 7 and had nothing to offer.
Then Windows 95 landed like a bomb: there was a CLOSE button in the corner of the window finally! And there was a start menu and a little status bar! And that's what we all decided we wanted, really badly. So it got cloned and picked up pervasively. Basically everyone not already part of one of the X11 camps was running this.
But the window was small. KDE kicked off mere months later, Gnome followed quickly after that, and we all forgot about fvwm95. But we for sure all remember it.
Comment by trinix912 16 hours ago
Comment by ptx 13 hours ago
Comment by bandrami 13 hours ago
Comment by jeroenhd 15 hours ago
This was also copied into other X window control styles. Even today, a Motif replicates the Windows 1.0-3.11 top-left menu+close button.
Comment by efdee 15 hours ago
Comment by jeroenhd 48 minutes ago
Comment by fredoralive 14 hours ago
Comment by LocalH 15 hours ago
Comment by ajross 15 hours ago
Yeah, yeah, I know CUA allows for a window close. No one knew. I worked IT at the time (as did lots of us here in our youth I'm sure) and was constantly teaching and re-teaching this trick to the poor people trapped with their CUA environments.
But suddenly with Windows 95 you could see how it worked.
[1] Even if we knew in our bones, c.f. this very discussion about the popularity of a cloned hack on Linux, that it was the Right Thing.
Comment by actionfromafar 15 hours ago
Comment by anthk 13 hours ago
You didn't switch between tasks, you switched between full opened desktops with Windows inside, one or two, the rest was somewhere else.
Comment by cosmic_cheese 15 hours ago
Huh? Perhaps I'm misunderstanding, but Mac windows had close buttons even as far back as System 1.x in 1984. Multitasking didn't land until System 5 with the optional MultiFinder in 1987 (made standard in System 7), but window close buttons were absolutely not a Win95 innovation.
Comment by LocalH 14 hours ago
Comment by xnorswap 14 hours ago
I have memories of being endlessly frustrated trying to use an iMac because "close" would just hide the window.
We've gone full circle, and now everything in windows likes to treat close as "minimize to system tray", but back in win9x era, the expectation was that close was "terminate the application".
Comment by cosmic_cheese 14 hours ago
This serves a couple of purposes: first, documents open more quickly (particularly when the program is loaded from a slow spinning HDD, floppy, etc) since the program doesn't need to be reloaded, and second, new document creation flows and non-document functions can be accessed without having a document open or requiring the developer to create a bespoke "home screen" UI that serves that purpose since the full menubar is accessible as long as the app is foregrounded.
Comment by xnorswap 13 hours ago
See this is what I mean, that's completely alien to a MS Windows user in the mid-nineties.
Comment by thesuitonym 13 hours ago
This is only confusing in comparison to Windows though. If you used graphical DOS applications, it was the exact same experience. You open the app, and can interact with your documents, but closing a document doesn't necessarily close the app.
Even Photoshop on Windows of the day worked the same way. When you opened Photoshop, a parent window would open that was the app. Closing documents left the app open, unless you also closed the parent window.
Comment by Am4TIfIsER0ppos 11 hours ago
Comment by ajross 15 hours ago
[1] These were the dark days of the mac. It was falling behind rapidly and the failure was accelerating. Jobs would walk back in the door within months of this moment too! Again, Windows 95 isn't felt to be notable in this community of true believers, but it was absolutely a bomb in the market as a whole. It changed everything, instantly.
Comment by cosmic_cheese 15 hours ago
Comment by LocalH 14 hours ago
Comment by ajross 15 hours ago
Sure, on $15k ($30k in 2025 dollars) Mac II's. See also the answer elsewhere about NeXTSTEP being a player in this space.
No one was doing it in the consumer space, no consumer knew about that stuff, Linux consumers on their 14" 800x600 monitors sure hadn't see it. And to repeat yet again, Microsoft Windows 95 landed like a bomb in this community and changed everything. And it happened very fast.
Comment by projektfu 13 hours ago
The finder was always a multi-window interface.
I just don't know where your memory is from.
Comment by LocalH 14 hours ago
Also, the Amiga had the window management you refer to in its earliest versions, in 1984. Amigas cost a hell of a lot less than $15,000, even packed to the brim with expansions. I grew up with the Amiga, so your assertion that "No one was doing it in the consumer space, no consumer knew about that stuff, Linux consumers on their 14" 800x600 monitors sure hadn't see it." is anecdotally false.
Comment by ajross 14 hours ago
Comment by LocalH 13 hours ago
Windows 95 didn't bring that much to the table over Windows 3.1, in terms of basic window management. The taskbar is really about it.
GEM died when DRI lost their stalwart status, as well as when Apple sued them. Amiga died when Commodore refused to innovate in the hardware space, but the engineers always had top-notch innovative OS ideas.
Comment by anthk 13 hours ago
Comment by kergonath 15 hours ago
When Windows 95 was released, the top of the line was the PowerMac 81000 and the remaining Quadras, and 1024x768 was common. Overlapping windows and multitasking were not particularly unheard of… The Mac Plus had not been sold for half a decade. System 7 was released 5 years before, and 7.5 at about the same time. I mean, sure Windows 95 was successful, but let’s not rewrite history.
Comment by slashdave 14 hours ago
Comment by thesuitonym 13 hours ago
It's almost a shame Microsoft clung to DOS compatibility for so long, that probably kept a lot of power users from seeing what Windows could do. But on the other hand, it's probably a good thing because it kept Unix popular and gave Linux and BSD room to grow.
Comment by anthk 13 hours ago