xbps as of recent
ffmpeg
neovimIt just feels right. It took me some time to get used to the vim motions. But man, does it make moving around any project so fast and natural. I went in for the customizability. And that’s obviously there. But the sheer speed it gives me is uncanny. My past self with VS Code could never.
I’d also suggest taking some time to write your own config from scratch once you get the hang of it; it’ll be worth it.
Does “Linux” itself count? I can’t even remember the last time I had anything running Linux have a system crash.
foothas been pretty solid for me. No complaints.GNU nano.
I don’t know why I bothered using Vim, Neovim, Micro, mg, and JOE for so long, when nano was always there (though not necessarily OOTB), configurable with all of the features I used in the other editors, and has never broken as long as I’ve been using it.
The only editor I may leave it for would be Emacs, and that would be more for the extension scripts and an excuse to learn ELisp than anything else.
ffmpeg and rsync are heavy candidates for me
Okular.
vim
grep
systemd
Those a fighting word
shere you go: systemd is so much better then sysv-init, it’s not even funny
I really can’t take people serious that think sysv-init was the superior system. I mean for real, have you ever worked with it and all it’s shortcomings? It wasnt even a system, it was a bunch of bad init scripts
openssh
and on the opposite side, nvidia drivers
MPV
Would change it for anything!
If I can’t play it in MPV, I don’t wanna play it.
Everything else feels like going back to the stone age. No offense to VLC fans. VLC is cool too, and I still recommend it because of its simpler GUI. But MPV is the MVP.
lessis an unsung hero.tint2










