• 40 minutes

      It ‘was’ uCollage, but whiny, obnoxious, ungrateful LiGNUts ruined it like many other unpaid softwares by driving a critical developer (Ueberzug) to quit or sellout.

      Many LiGNUts probably work for Microsoft, because Microsoft gains when they cause issues, and mislead and lie to people.

  • I tried neovim for a while and I went back to vim for that reason: setup once, then forget about it.

    I have plugins that haven’t been touch for 5 years+ and they are working as intended.

    Rock solid.

    • nvim is great and convenient in many ways, and a vast improvement over vim, and yet vim is so amazing on its own that I can’t even be arsed to add an extra letter to the command like 70% of the time.

    • 2 hours

      I bounced off neovim because I am always on fresh boxes with minimal access to the internet. Helix is everything included and I can install with a single file.

  • Bottles.

    Without it, I wouldn’t be able to run addictive keys on Linux. I paid for the software back when I used Windows and since I’m able to use addictive keys on Linux, haven’t bothered trying to find an alternative.

    That said, its the only use case I’ve had with bottles that just works. Other programs ive tried are more hit or miss.

  • 6 hours

    vim, awesomewm, mbsync (isync),

    As for recent discoveries: dwl — I was surprised on how robust it is, and how well it works.

  • Debian and basically everything in its repos. Might be somewhat old, but it is really fucking stable

    • 2 hours

      It’s a blessing and a curse how stable it is. I think less bleeding edge is better but when shit like audio and GPU are fucked they’re pretty much always fucked until dist-upgrade time.

    • 7 hours

      My small selfhosted system appreciates this very much. Having Debian as my base OS makes everything easier.

    • 8 hours

      Total agreement. So many unsung heroes involved in Debian. Work has agreed with me - today’s job involved migrating those load balancers to Debian underneath.

  • 7 hours

    Many have already mentioned tools that I also use and appreciate immensely.
    My pick is Steam. I’ve picked up on gaming in the past 2 years and it’s very stable right now. Every game that I have interest in just works, I can install games, including early access or demos without looking at the compatibility or the release date. The download speeds of games are high (imho at least where I’m located, and compared with a PS5). My partner is a heavy gamer and has to yet find a game that doesn’t work on her machine.