It’s a UNIX Linux system, I know this!
(Got the sources from https://github.com/mcuelenaere/fsv/releases/tag/fsv-0.9-1)
@cinnamon how wrll does this work? Updated 10 years ago lol. Is it usable on (I know i know baby versions) distros like mint? Im too scared to try arch as a driver yet
@smolbrain Fsv isn’t not usable beyond the screenshot to brag, unfortunately. You specify a root directory to analyze, the code analyzes all its contents (it can take a while), you click on a folder in a GTK2 file tree (not shown on my screenshot), and the 3D view focuses on that.
The first render of a newly selected folder looks good (as pictured), but if you zoom in/out (with mouse middle button press + mouse up/down) it starts to spit a lot of GL errors on stdout and the whole render gets wrong (items get transparent and there’s artifacts everywhere).
At least that’s what I get here on an old Ubuntu 22.04. Sorry to disappoint
@kasdeya Bad. It preprocesses all the file tree first, so browsing a whole large filesystem would be super-slow.
@kasdeya Ehm… It’s no shitpost. Psdoom was a real program that existed in the 2000’s. I’ve never run it myself, tho.
@cinnamon I believe it - I guess by calling it a “shitpost” I meant that the program itself was a shitpost, despite the fact that it worked. but yeah I love that this existed
honestly now that ZDoom can handle non-Euclidean spaces it shouldn’t be too hard to have arbitrarily-organizable process lists that are in fractally-nested rooms. or even file lists where each room is a directory
maybe someone should remake this