Update existing installations using Update > Omarchy from Omarchy menu (Super + Alt + Space).
Install on new machines with the ISO:
Super + Ctrl + R, seeing all the ones set via Super + Ctrl + Alt + R, and clearing all via Super + Ctrl + Shift + R. Everything also accessible via Trigger > Reminder by @dhhSuper + Ctrl + Alt + W by @dhhSuper + Ctrl + ., and omarchy transcode menu/CLI for video, audio, and gif transcoding by @dhh~/.config/omarchy/hooks/post-update.d/my.hook directory-style hooks instead of a single file (easier for extensions to drop files than munge a single config) by @dhhsof-firmware @mijunyomarchy cli metadata inconsistencies by @dhhomarchy refresh applications should also update npx stubs by @dhh@earendil-works/pi-coding-agent by @ryanrhughesOmarchy now has a built-in way to set simple reminders based on a countdown timer and with a message. You can do this via Super + Ctrl + R, seeing all the ones set via Super + Ctrl + Alt + R, and clearing all via Super + Ctrl + Shift + R. Everything also accessible via Trigger > Reminder. You can also use the cli with omarchy reminder 7 'Tea ready'.
Live weather is now available in the Waybar when you have an internet connection. It uses the brilliant https://wttr.in as the backend, translates that to cute glyphs, and even considers day/night according to the local sunrise/sunset times.
There's also a more detailed notification you can trigger with Super + Ctrl + Alt + W:
The holy trifecta of productivity defaults can now be set explicitly from the menu. Whether you like Foot or Ghostty, Chromium or Zen, Neovim or Helix, you can make Omarchy yours with very little effort. Install what you need from Install > Terminal or Install > Editor or Install > Browser, then set your default or change it via Setup > Defaults.
Omarchy can now install browsers with all the correct configs for Omarchy from the install menu. Browser-specific styling was moved into this flow, so changing browsers keeps Omarchy's theme integration intact.
You get live theming with Chrome, Edge, Brave, and Brave Origin.
Foot joins the terminal lineup with Omarchy defaults and theme support. Install it from Install > Terminal and theme it like the rest of the system. It's a remarkably light terminal, using about a fifth of the memory footprint of other already light options like Alacritty:
Omarchy strongly recommends using encryption with any installation going onto a machine that can be stolen or lost. But if you're running Omarchy on a headless server that's fully secured, it can make sense to turn off encryption to make it easier to do remote restarts. This can now be done on the disk confirmation stage during install by hitting Ctrl + c. An unencrypted install still asks for the password on boot, but as part of the normal login process. Not pre-boot.
You can now set the screensaver to an ASCII-rendered version of an image, giving the lock/idle experience another fun customization opportunity. You do this via Style > Screensaver > Set From Image.
The same can be done for the about screen via Style > Screensaver > Set From Image.
Zed will now get live theming when installed via Install > Editor > Zed.
You can now transcode images and videos directly from the Omarchy menu through Trigger > Transcode or Super + Ctrl + R. Super handy when you've taken a screenshot and you need it as a small jpg (instead of the default png) or you've recorded a short video and you want it as a gif.
Full Changelog: v3.7.1...v3.8.0