I’m not that high on the totem pole unfortunately
I’m not that high on the totem pole unfortunately
When you help manage thousands of servers with vim and nano already installed, it’s just faster to use one of those than installing something else nearly ever single time.
I prefer nano for quick edits of small files, but vim for hunting down things in larger files.
tips fedora M’eveloper
Jokes on Microsoft. I downgraded to Windows 10 and disabled secure boot for my dual boot so I could be one step closer to being done with them completely.
A better title would be “The best way to switch to Linux is slowly.”
I want to day you could probably lump Shein with those as well but I have nothing to back that up except it has the same scammy feel.
I actually have one of the USB A cables above from an old android tablet that had 2 full USB A ports on the side.
One was always a slave/device port while the other actually had a physical switch to change from Host to Device.
That used to be my mobile media tablet. I could cast wirelessly or steam directly from the mini HDMI port. Such an awesome device for how cheap it was.
I just started using Konsole and so far it’s ticking all my boxes.
I couldn’t care fewer
I’ve never actually used vim, though occasionally fallback on vi for remote admin. I may finally check it out now though. Thanks!
Oh for what it’s worth, I probably agree more with the fact that autosave should be on by default but also possible to disable.
But yes, I do have my preference and I admit it is just that, a preference.
So out of curiosity, what did you move to and do you use autosaving? I’m always willing to try out other text editors but it’ll take something impressive to make me start autosaving.
Man, maybe I just grew up in a different time and/or environment but I still to this day manually save obsessively. I use VSCode most days and feel like I’m constantly hitting the save hotkey. With that said though, I am just not a fan of most autosaves. I like to know what the current contents are and whether or not I have unsaved changes.
That’s just me though.
Stardiew Valley with mods
That was my guess, from others’ context. Hits almost all of the good points.
How containerized though? Could it be a replacement for a docker server “farm” on a single machine or is it know for apps to simply use locally?
As a noob, can someone briefly explain flatpaks and why they may be preferred?
I primarily just use whatever the distro has(gnome terminal most often), though I use iTerm2 with omz on my work MacBook and really enjoy the customizability with tabs, panes, hotkeys, and especially triggers.
Can anyone recommend a good equivalent on Linux?
I see a lot of others listed here with many features. I’m open to trying a few to find a good alternative, though I don’t want to move all my eggs to a basket only to find out it doesn’t support some feature.
If it has been particularly frustrating for me, I’ll even go out of my way to block the whole domain.
It’s also possible they create and upload the same content in both locations but have to target the larger YouTube demographic via clickbait thumbnails.
Sidebery has become one of my must haves for new installs.