4 days
Same. Every machine I have control of I install Helix. For the rest, I remember just enough vi to do what I need and get out.
Same. Every machine I have control of I install Helix. For the rest, I remember just enough vi to do what I need and get out.

Looking back… none of them. I had an OG Gameboy, GBA, PS2, Wii, 3DS, and now a Switch 2. My favorite was probably either the first Gameboy or the 3DS. I loved all of the weird streetpass stuff when I was traveling for work. But I have great memories of all of them, and the S2 has been a lot of fun with my kids.

Oh yeah. I’ve had to do a small amount of it on much simpler systems for work from time to time, and it’s always been damn hard. Often rewarding in a weird way, but very difficult.

What do you think Project Support is?

There are dozens of us!

Helix when I can install things, vi when I can’t.
In college, my advisor/boss was basically the emacs guy, so I picked up enough to do some basic text editing but didn’t go further because I didn’t feel like spending hours reading man pages.
Later I worked at a place where a shared computer only had vi, so same story. I learned about a half dozen commands and left it with that.
Then I went though a series of other editors and IDEs at different jobs, Notepad++, StyledEdit, CodeWarrior, CodeComposer, some weird proprietary Netbeans based thing, VS Code, etc. I still used vi for minor config editing on the occasional remote machine.
Then I got a job where I would be doing a ton of work on headless remotes, so I decided to get serious about learning something purely terminal based. I tried a couple of things, but ended up with Helix because:
Now I’m all helix all the time and really enjoying it.