 What's up everyone? So, I have a couple additions to my i3 config that I think people might be interested in. And before anyone asks, yeah, we're going to have a fuller rising video coming out. I'm on vacation right now. I don't have the laptop that I have a fresh install on, so I just have my normal machine here. But let me show you some of the stuff I'm adding right now. Just some little stuff. First off, I used to have my key remappings done in Exynet instead of here. But since I only use i3 and nothing else, I figured, oh, I might as well just do them in the i3 config, so I have one less file left to worry about. So for example, I now have a command that runs that will remap caps lock to escape. That really helps with Vim. I used to have that in another file now it's here. And this one remaps what is it, the menu button to another super key. So that's nice. I just added those just to kind of have everything in one place. But that's not super interesting. One of the things that I've added is, well, let me show you the problem. If you're using i3, you might know, or specifically i3 gaps. i3 gaps is not compatible with like the Windows borders that are normally around i3 tool or Windows. And because those show you which window you're actively on, it's a little difficult to tell which window you're on if you have a bunch up. So, you know, in a situation like this, I might forget where I've moved to. So I've made this little script, and I've mapped it to mod plus grave and mod plus backspace. And if I press it, what happens is the window I'm selected, I have selected just sort of flashes. And that's just sort of just to indicate like where you are. So to show you what actually that is doing, all it is is it's using the transit command. You can just download this, it's, you know, out there. And it just like increases or decreases opacity and increases it sort of, you know, two times nice and quick in, you know, half a second just so you know where you are. So that's a nice little thing that, you know, helps you in a pinch. So that's one part. Let's see what else. So I also made some changes to my screen casting commands, sort of to make them more universal. So originally, I just had like a big screen cast command like written out here. And of course I map it to like one button. So whenever I press the pause button on my think pad, it ought, I mean, it automatically starts recording. I mean, this is what I have running right now. But I actually changed the command. Now it's a bash script that's a little, a little better in two respects. One is that it chooses the file name smartly. So it used to just go to like output.mkv. That's what it's doing right now. But now I have it so that if, if I already have an output file, it'll just make it output underscore one or output underscore two of, you know, that way I don't have anything overwriting. I never accidentally overwrote, overwrote anything, but you know, it's nice to be safe. And the other optimization is I now have this little line here, which it used to be, I just told it use my screen resolution, but now it automatically finds the screen resolution. So I can use this command on like different machines or different screens now. So that's nice. I don't have to manually change it. And the same is true with the audio in terms of like it now is smart named. So I don't have to really think about that. So that's another optimization sort of in my scripts. And another thing I'm going to add later, I haven't totally finished it. I mean, I have like a sort of a working version of it, just a little bass script, you feed it like a directory and an interval, and it'll loop through all the different wallpapers in that folder and set them as your background. So I don't have that active now. I'm still, you know, it works right now. I just want it to be a little better in different ways. So, you know, I might not put that one out yet. But the big optimization, or at least like the interesting one I've added is I finally made use of the scratch pad. And you might not know about this. Sorry, that was my dryer. You might not know about this thing. It's like this little thing I three has where it can hide away windows and sort of like, well, a scratch pad. Anyway, I'll just show you how it works. So what happens is what these command do is like when I three starts, it automatically pulls up a terminal window, names it drop down and starts Tmux in it just because I wanted it like that. And then it hide it, you know, hides this instance of drop down. Well, first off, it makes it floating. And then it hides it on a scratch pad. And how the scratch pad works is when you show the scratch pad, the window, the scratch pad windows appear, then you can hide it again. And then they're gone. So long story short, I've mapped mod you to show the scratch pad. If I press that, the Tmux window will come up. And what I can do is this is basically like a drop down terminal. So I can, you know, update, I have some updates up here. So we can go ahead and do some updating. Now, if I press Ctrl or mod you again, it'll disappear. And if I'm on another window, I press mod you again. And here it is. So that's really nice. It's really nice. I use it for a couple things background scripts or like, you know, sometimes I might pull up a calculator. And, you know, just if I forget what two plus two is or something like that. So yeah, that is definitely a nice little thing to have, which I definitely use. It's nice not having to pull up an extra window just when I need to have to, if I have like five windows up and I don't want to mess up my settings, you know, I don't want to pull another window up. So yeah, those are some of the additions I have put on now. And I'll probably put, yeah, I'll put the new i3 config in the video description along with the scripts that I haven't heard so far. So anyway, thanks for watching. And yeah, Fuller Rice is coming soon along with other videos. I'm actually working on a couple things right now. Sorry for the slower update. I've had like work and school and all this stuff. I'm working on a qualifying paper and stuff. So anyway, have a good one. See you around.