Window Maker Live 13.2 brings 32-bit life to Debian 13
- Reference: 1765299735
- News link: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2025/12/09/microsoft_windows_maker_live_132/
- Source link:
[1]Window Maker Live is a Debian-based desktop distro built around the classic [2]Window Maker X11 window manager. As the "Live" in its name suggests, it's designed as a live-bootable image that's ready to use, with a rich variety of pre-installed software, carefully chosen and themed to fit in with Window Maker's NeXTstep-style look. Like many other Debian-based distros, this new version is based on this year's Debian 13 release, but with a difference: while [3]Debian 13 no longer ships an x86-32 version , the new Window Maker Live 13.2 release does offer a release for 32-bit computers. In fact, it's the default.
[4]
Window Maker Live gives you a fairly lean, mean 32-bit Debian machine - Click to enlarge
We last [5]looked at Window Maker Live in 2023. That release was based around Debian 12.2 and Window Maker 0.96, both released earlier that year. We were interested in that release of Window Maker Live because in addition to a whole compilation of conventional X11 Linux apps, it also offered a separate selection of GNUstep applications which replicated NeXTstep's distinctive look and feel, with menus stacked vertically at the top left of the screen, any of which could be torn off to create an instant toolbar.
There hasn't been a new release of Window Maker since then – you can tell it's a slow-moving project from the fact that it's been in development since 1997 and hasn't gotten to version 1.0 yet. Hurrah for [6]zero-based versioning . But there has been a new major release of Debian – Debian 13 "Trixie," which took the drastic step of dropping a separate 32-bit kernel for x86-32 machines. It can still run 32-bit apps, but to install Debian 13, you must have a 64-bit computer. As a result, most Debian-based distros, such as [7]Peppermint OS and Linux Mint Debian Edition , have also stopped offering 32-bit editions.
Enter WMLive 13.2. Not only does it still have a 32-bit edition, but that edition is the only ISO file on the [8]downloads page . There are 64-bit editions, but the project [9]requests a donation to get the password to unpack the encrypted 64-bit archives. The donations page explains:
The i386 variant is freely available and ready for use now. But to unpack the two 7z archives of the amd64 and arm64 variant, respectively, a password is required. This password will become freely available on this very page at the end of this year. But until then, only downloaders who supported our work on wmlive with any donation amount will be provided with the required password.
The distro has been around [10]since at least 2013 . As the presence of a custom kernel suggests, it's more than just a Debian remix. The maintainer [11]says :
wmlive contains a few package additions that are not (yet?) available as official Debian packages, like for example the web browser Palemoon (compiled using gtk2), Previous (a NeXT emulator), Box86 (a PC emulator), Parcellite (gtk2 based clipboard manager), and Scantailor-advanced (book scan post-processor), among others. A few administration-related scripts supplying a user-friendly GUI based on yad-gtk2 are also included. Furthermore, I maintain a dedicated package repository at [12]https://wmlive.rumbero.org/repo/ providing both binaries and sources for all these additions.
In the same thread, they also explained the request for donations:
Before the release of wmlive-trixie, the binary ISO images for former wmlive releases have always been free for all. But no matter how politely I asked for donations to support my work, almost no one of the many thousands of downloaders of this niche project have ever bothered to give anything in return. If my calculations are correct, I have received about 200 EUR by about 14 donators during the course of the last 12 years (twelve!).
As has been [13]long established , and [14]more than once , outside of the big enterprise vendors, it's hard to make a living developing FOSS.
[15]Raspberry Pi OS, LMDE, Peppermint OS join the Debian 13 club
[16]Debian 13 'Trixie' arrives: x86-32 and MIPS out, RISC-V in
[17]Kelsey Hightower: If governments rely on FOSS, they should fund it
[18]Window Maker Live: When less is more, but more is also ... more?
This is a slightly different approach: develop a bespoke version for low-end kit, and request donations for the version aimed at more current hardware. It's a novel fund-raising tactic and we wish the project luck with it.
[19]
On top of Debian and its apps like Firefox, you also get the GNUstep environment and apps - Click to enlarge
This vulture is very fond of the almost austere aesthetic of Window Maker and GNUstep. WMLive delivers this in the live environment, and if you put it on a USB key, it offers persistence: it can store files and settings from one boot to the next. Or, from a separate option on the boot menu, you can install it like any other distro. As far as we know, it's currently the only 32-bit x86 flavor of Debian 13.
As we said last time, there's substantial duplication and overlap between the apps it contains, but even so, WMLive offers an elegant and capable setup. It's only a 3.5 GB download, takes up 8.4 GB of disk space, and uses an almost trifling 270 MB of RAM. It's not just some tech demo, but a complete and powerful OS – and it's just over half the size of the latest full Ubuntu. There's a lot to like here. ®
[20]
Get our [21]Tech Resources
[1] https://wmlive.sourceforge.net/
[2] https://www.windowmaker.org/
[3] https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/12/debian_13_trixie_released/
[4] https://regmedia.co.uk/2025/12/09/wmlive-ffetch.jpg
[5] https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/25/window_maker_096_live/
[6] https://0ver.org/
[7] https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/15/raspberry_pi_os_lmde_debian_13/
[8] https://sourceforge.net/projects/wmlive/files/wmlive-trixie-13.2/
[9] https://wmlive.sourceforge.net/downloads.html
[10] https://distrowatch.com/?newsid=07909
[11] https://forum.puppylinux.com/viewtopic.php?t=16063
[12] https://wmlive.rumbero.org/repo/
[13] https://www.theregister.com/2023/04/07/thanksdev_open_source_funding/
[14] https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/19/kelsey_hightower_civo/
[15] https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/15/raspberry_pi_os_lmde_debian_13/
[16] https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/12/debian_13_trixie_released/
[17] https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/19/kelsey_hightower_civo/
[18] https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/25/window_maker_096_live/
[19] https://regmedia.co.uk/2025/12/09/wml-gstep-ffox.jpg
[20] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/oses&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=2&c=2aTiqBnTX7jwD_MtPnvb8fQAAAIQ&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D2%26raptor%3Dcondor%26pos%3Dtop%26test%3D0
[21] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/
Re: Impressive
I used AfterStep myself for many years(late 90s to mid 00s) I assume because windowmaker was more popular(though Enlightenment was most popular among newbies) and I wanted something different (same reason I chose Slackware originally over Red Hat in 1996, went to Debian in 1998). Seemed quite similar in UI to windowmaker, I think both could use all of the same "applets" or whatever they were called. But it is what got me hooked on using tons of virtual desktops and using edge flipping (move mouse to edge of screen to move to adjacent desktop), which became a critical part of my workflow through to today where I run Mint+Mate with a Gnome app named brightside which hasn't seen an update since 2004 (last released with Ubuntu 16), though managed to get it to build cleanly (and 17 other dependencies) on Mint 22, so happy to continue to have a consistent interface for a few more years yet. Brightside provides the edge flipping functionality to Gnome, and I have not found an alternative to that tool (last I checked anyway). AfterStep was last updated in 2013, though I think I switched to Gnome v1 around 2006/7.
I even ran LiteStep on Windows XP at one job I was at about two decades ago, not quite as nice as AfterStep but worked well enough. The company's IT team couldn't figure out how to open control panel on my computer so I suppose that was a nice side effect.
Your mention of GNUStep triggered an Afterstep memory since it stored some things in ~/GNUstep I believe, other than that I have no idea what GNUstep even was(assuming it was something..).
sample screenshot (removed a couple of private things just in case) from 2002, at one point I ran with something like 64 virtual desktops but no screenshot of that unfortunately. Today I use 24 virtual desktops(all but 3 currently in use)
http://elreg.nateamsden.com/x-desktop-02-27-01.jpg
Re: Impressive
Forgot about AfterStep. Thanks for reminding me of that option. Never got that to work exactly as I wanted either. One day I'll have my fake NeXT cube. I'll probably be disappointed as with most things "retro"
Impressive
I rather liked the NeXTstep/Open step WM/DE back in the day. Tried to get Window Maker and GNUstep to play nicely decades ago with varying success. It's partially nostalgia, but the NeXTstep style still seems elegant to me.