This has gotta be the best explanation of Emacs’ appeal I’ve seen yet, out of many.
Have u considered writing them?
Anyway, ULauncher looks very good to me as a Raycast alternative.
I’ve done lots of searching and Reddit comments about what makes Emacs so appealing. I think Emacs users like the specific ecosystem and things it offers and they put in the work to tailor it for them. Consistently is one thing I hear. Tell me ur thoughts.
I don’t find anything appealing about it over Neovim + TUIs and keyboard navigation in GUI apps, including hints: https://github.com/AlfredoSequeida/hints.
except one time when I knocked a cup of water into one in 2005.
This but repeatedly for some people. I only drink from my metal bottles, and turn away from my computer. Admittedly I could be more careful by moving away from the computer but now its been years since it happened.
DId u read the post? I’m on a MBP so I would dual boot to macOS (it’s not possible to run windows on it rn without a VM).
That hasn’t really happened with macs even up to several years old with those parts irreplaceable, by the time that would happen the device should be replaced.
Yes replaceable parts would be better but the ones on Macs do in fact last a very long time.
Unfortunately it doesn’t work on ARM devices right now.
No I don’t want tiling, I want windows that can overlap, I just want to control them with hotkeys.
and in the cloud
I often look things up out of curiosity and looked up ““Hasicorp Mushycorp”” to see if anything would show up. Nothing did.
rn Im using Kitty, I’ll check out Ghostty later.
For the record: https://docs.zen-browser.app/faq#why-cant-zen-browser-play-drm-protected-content
Zen Browser currently lacks DRM-support, because it does not have a Widevine license. Acquiring such a license requires the payment of large fees (at least $5,000). …
Although I understand the reasoning beyond the language used in this post, I’m sad to read that hardened privacy is considered a power user thing.
What’s really sad is the fact you need to make a bunch of convenience tradeoffs and go well out of your way for improved privacy, and on a browser that already has a lot of built-in features for privacy. And a downside of using a Firefox fork is not getting the latest Firefox updates ASAP, you have to wait for the fork to update. It goes to show how privacy-invasive the web is.
No, Midori is based on Floorp. https://github.com/goastian/midori-desktop
“Midori initially uses the Gecko/Firefox code under the Floorp Browser project.”
While dev of Zen Browser is faster, I’ve faced way less bugs than in Floorp
you’re right