richmond62 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 6:34 pm
I don't what 'Lameodition' is supposed to mean: but it might occur to you that quite few people have been chasing after that for 2 years, and while that may be according to your point of view, 'lame', it might be better than waiting on something muscle-bound that never quite gets 'there', wherever 'there' is.
Certainly calling it 'Lameodition' strikes me a puerile, and guaranteed to rub quite a few people up the wrong way.
I can't help it if people have thin skins. I did only mean it in a light-hearted, joking way... and it wasn't directed at anyone. I do sincerely think that apps that in 2023 still don't support darkMode (and I'm forced to use a very expensive commercial app daily that still doesn't) are indeed quite LAME, just for that reason alone... in my subjective opinion.
If it's a Windows 10 app, that's a little more understandable, since the only 'darkMode' in Win 10 are only in later version and they're in undocumented bits of MS private frameworks.
You can't compose and play a musical sequences in message box with this version, that's lame too IMO!
Anyway, you and anyone else can always rename it to 'OXT Lite-ish' or whatever you like, I did a quick change to the icon and the menu bar app name (info.plist), so I could tell which version I was working on.
It took me like two hours or so to swap in some icons, remove extensions, comment out some lines in Home & revMenuBar, disable a button in revPreferences stack to make this version that I didn't personally want at all (I did it for the challenge). Granted I didn't have to hunt for what to un-change since I did the changes, but I can't believe that anyone was chasing this very hard (and they could always ask me for help with undoing anything that I've changed) for two years. Honestly I spent more time this morning moving stuff from my garage into the shed that my wife and I built over the weekend.
So the 'bloat' that I did removed (including some stuff that was already there when we got it) totaled only 100 megabytes, that's it! For the compressed disk-image it only made that 10mb smaller. Removing the extra SVG icons, widgets, small libraries, etc. even with resources like a Soundfont (4mb) or other resources, doesn't make a whole lot of difference. The most amount of space is used by the Standalone engines in the Runtimes folder, which has multiple versions of CEF (Chromium Embedded Framework) that Browser Widget (currently) uses on Windows and Linux.
If you take the toolset folder from this and drop in replace toolset in another install, it should work/look the same (without the 'OXT LAME' name & icon).