In the traditional Windows paradigm, you spend a significant amount of time "window gardening"—dragging, resizing, and minimizing floating windows that stack on top of one another. A replaces this chaos with a rigid, non-overlapping grid where every application has its own defined territory . While once exclusive to power users on Linux, modern tools now bring this high-efficiency workflow to Windows 11. Why Switch to a Tiling Window Manager?
Microsoft’s own "PowerToys" suite includes a tool called . It is a hybrid between manual snapping and tiling.
If you are a Linux user forced to use Windows, or a purist who wants a scriptable configuration, Komorebi is the answer. It mimics the behavior of popular Linux managers like bspwm or i3 .
In the traditional Windows paradigm, you spend a significant amount of time "window gardening"—dragging, resizing, and minimizing floating windows that stack on top of one another. A replaces this chaos with a rigid, non-overlapping grid where every application has its own defined territory . While once exclusive to power users on Linux, modern tools now bring this high-efficiency workflow to Windows 11. Why Switch to a Tiling Window Manager?
Microsoft’s own "PowerToys" suite includes a tool called . It is a hybrid between manual snapping and tiling.
If you are a Linux user forced to use Windows, or a purist who wants a scriptable configuration, Komorebi is the answer. It mimics the behavior of popular Linux managers like bspwm or i3 .