It lets you keep track of your file history in one place. You can share that history with others in many ways. Use it as a collaborative tool. It allows everyone to work independently and combine their code on their own terms. It’s really hard to mess it up and put it in a bad state, almost everything can be undone without consequences. You can set up central repos on shared drives or servers, or choose to forgo central repos all together. It works fine using simple paradigms but can scale to be as sophisticated as you need. It’s easy to set up and doesn’t get in the way of your other work.
Being able to type something like "z ab g f" to reach a fairly deeply nested directory is almost akin to magic. I absolutely hate cd'ing everywhere, and often I'm cd'ing between the same couple of directories for a number of projects, so I feel like it helps retain my sanity. I've also written scripts to take advantage of it, such as a cp clone that doesn't require an immediate target. So I can cp a file (or number of files, or a directory), z-jump to a different directory and paste it there instead of laboriously typing out all the directory paths. I love it.
For personal life: Marvin for reading (infinite auto scroll, custom fonts are awesome), Insight Timer as a simple meditation timer.
It feels years ahead of any other competition in just about every sense.
Runner-up: IntelliJ. I haven't written a line of Java in several years, but I still use it.
Probably goes without saying, but I don't know how I would survive without GNU/POSIX. Many blessings to all involved.
I'm not always excited to open them up. Docs and Sheets don't seem to be seeing much visible improvement over the last few years. But in my org they're the way we build consensus, make decisions, track, document, discuss, and more. It's easy for me to complain about them, but they are both so effective and valuable (to me).
As an engineer I probably would have said JetBrains IDEs. I find myself spending less time thinking about tooling, syntax, the standard library, finding/moving/renaming things, and more time thinking about what I'm building.
WinAMP 2.95 - simple and effective music player
TotalCommander - brings file management on the next level, very smooth and robust.
All of these are from 10-15 years in the past, unfortunately
Simple, works, keep me connected with people who are relevant.
Long term - Vi/vim as many have mentioned already. Well, more specifically it's bindings in vscode, but still. It's just so powerful :)
I am also pretty satisfied with YouTube (premium, so no ads): high quality videos that load fast, clean UI, very good recommendations, huge community.
I would also like to say Twitch, but their platform is a lot more buggy than YouTube, quality not that great and it's harder to find good content/streamers.
How you can rearrange the interface. The shortcuts. How fast it is.
- good feature set - active development - native UI elements
git -- Change history is your friend, and you get out what you put in (hashes verify data against corruption)
tinc -- There Is No Cabal: Mesh VPN lets you build a VPN across diverse environments including different clouds.
* chromium devtools
* vs code
* bitvise ssh for Windows
* Sumatra PDF reader for Windows
* moon+ reader for android (epub reader)
* F-stop Gallery for Android (Picture library management)
Firefox.
All-in-one Messenger
eReader Prestigio (Android)
Pop!_OS
Alpine Linux
Firefox
Alacritty
Vim
K-Meleon browser
MiXplorer
Block This
sublime
photoshop
krita