It hink the other comments already made good points, but just to complete it for me:
- There's very little learning curve with i3. After setting/learning 2 or 3 keyboard shortcuts you're good to go. That makes the adoption a no brainer.
- 99% of what I do is done in a shell (code, sysadmin) or a browser (read doc, write doc). That means I often need a lot of shell windows all over the place. The tiling really helps here. I could use tmux/screen for that (that's what I did before i3), but I often already have tmuxes on the remote boxes I ssh to, and the inception makes navigation harder.
- it's fast, there no animation or latency whatshowever. I can very quickly open a shell, ssh, run a command, close it, etc.
Most of these could be done with any keyboard oriented tiling wm, I just so happen to use i3.
- There's very little learning curve with i3. After setting/learning 2 or 3 keyboard shortcuts you're good to go. That makes the adoption a no brainer.
- 99% of what I do is done in a shell (code, sysadmin) or a browser (read doc, write doc). That means I often need a lot of shell windows all over the place. The tiling really helps here. I could use tmux/screen for that (that's what I did before i3), but I often already have tmuxes on the remote boxes I ssh to, and the inception makes navigation harder.
- it's fast, there no animation or latency whatshowever. I can very quickly open a shell, ssh, run a command, close it, etc.
Most of these could be done with any keyboard oriented tiling wm, I just so happen to use i3.