While KDE Plasma is a massive upgrade over traditional Wayland 3D Cube, it remains a traditional 2D desktop. Alfred Linux introduces the Spatial OS—a custom Wayland/Hyprland environment where the desktop becomes a spiritual, immersive interface.
By forcefully enabling cubeEnabled=true and Wayland natively via the KWin compositor, your workspaces are transformed into a literal 3D Spinning Cube.
The Implication: When you swipe between virtual desktops, the entire screen zooms out into a 3D spatial cube that you rotate manually to transition between environments. Your machine no longer feels like a flat ledger; it feels like a physical object in spatial reality.
The 3D spatial environments are explicitly mapped to the Twelve Tribes. Each face of the cube and its sub-workspaces correspond to a specific spiritual discipline or mission objective.
The Implication: Swiping between virtual desktops feels like moving between different sanctums. You shift seamlessly from the Judah environment (Leadership & Code Editing) to the Levi environment (Sanctuary Server Management & Auditing).
For the last 30 years, Linux ran on "Wayland", a 2D display server that was flat and rigid. By upgrading the foundation to Wayland, Alfred Linux now renders the desktop using the GPU directly, unlocking massive potential.
Swiping 4 fingers doesn't just trigger a pre-baked animation; the screen moves fluidly exactly as your fingers move, peeling back the layers of the OS like you're pulling a curtain.
Windows are no longer solid, opaque boxes. They are frosted glass elements that blur the dynamic environment behind them in real-time, calculating depth through the GPU.
Every single frame is perfectly synchronized with your monitor's refresh rate. No screen tearing, no stuttering—just pure, uninterrupted visual fluidity.
The 3D Cube is only the beginning. Our ongoing integration with Hyprland enables custom OpenGL shaders directly in the compositor layer.
Advanced particle shaders attached directly to the Omegon AI terminal. As the LLM infers and generates tokens, the terminal window emits subtle, glowing embers that dynamically respond to system load.
Fluid-dynamic shaders integrated into the desktop dock. As your mouse glides over application icons, the dock physically ripples like water, creating a living, breathing interface.