Curaga - you are a super-genius! I had NO IDEA you could do a non-standard modeline to a modern computer monitor. Last time I touched modelines was back in the very early glass monitor days. I made a custom modeline exactly half my native resolution, and holy cow, it rocks! The core log was burning a hole in my forehead so I got rid of that.
Vinnie - you brought it all back. Created a custom modeline which worked out to the same values you have, and created a file as root with an X11 monitor-section called 5-monitor.conf in /usr/local/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/5-monitor.conf. Added that to the TC backup file list to make sure it stays.
I probably should make a writeup for others who like us, dig the fltk/flwm environment on modern high-res monitors, but their standard values are just too blurry no matter what. Curaga just rocked my world.
Nick - back on topic - I think the main issue is that most consumers aren't really using computers to compute anything, but are just turning them into other things that need flash and sparkle. Multimedia, gaming, and even web-browsing where the underlying code is 90% unnecessary graphics and 10% content - if that.
Sadly, as we know, the browser has gone from it's original intent into an o/s of it's own. Nobody without corporate backing can keep up with all the javascript which is just taking over. Sadly, I think this browser developer just reached a stage of burnout which many devs recognize:
https://tenfourfox.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-end-of-tenfourfox-and-what-ive.htmlSpreadsheets? I have never seen anyone use them for what they were designed for. If anything, they were simply used as electronic graph-paper, or *maybe* sorting a row of data. A bunch of horsepower and resources hogged just to make a lunch-seating chart.
Anyway, to each his own. I keep it simple and yes, I do now run TC 64 bit on modern computers - even those that are secure-boot. Details elsewhere here.
The thing that is overlooked is just how fast things are now. We *can* go back to the days of simple sed/grep/awk and just smoke 'em compared to the old days. Even huge text files are so easily crunched, that even flat text files which used to be laughed at compared to dedicated databases, can be pressed into service merely based on speed now.
All I need is a nice looking system for the eyes. But it doesn't have to be total resource hogging eye-candy. Save that for actual computing, not entertainment.
If I need a spreadsheet, I'll whip up the ol' "SC" spreadsheet. Know what I mean?