dharmik
Multiple GNOME terminals in one window!
Terminator was originally developed by Chris Jones in 2007 as a simple, 300-ish line python script. Since then, it has become The Robot Future of Terminals. Originally inspired by projects like quadkonsole and gnome-multi-term and more recently by projects like Iterm2, and Tilix, It lets you combine and recombine terminals to suit the style you like. If you live at the command-line, or are logged into 10 different remote machines at once, you should definitely try out Terminator.
terminator sounds great. never heard of it. i did try ghostty, but i can't help myself opening xfce terminal. muscle memory.
thanks for the required motivation! i started to settle, i will try arch today after i am done with my exams.
yes, i get it. it's sort of a thing that my brain can't describe either, but want to hear someone go about it continuously to get it better.
@[email protected] i get what you saying. but as i lack experience with distros i find it interesting. can you add a few more examples of polished like how?
@[email protected] most of the issues elderly or someone not familiar with tech might face is installing something. pop os is the answer i think.
it’s called macos, and honestly, i’m glad it exists. seeing apple choose a unix-based system is a win. windows is just... not it. it’s nice that macos lets people work in a way that feels closer to linux without needing to dive into the deep end right away. sure, it’s not open like linux, but it’s a step in the right direction for those who want a mix of usability and power.
i made this for anyone struggling to remember vim commands and want a basic text-editor like experience
https://git.sr.ht/~dharmik/hello-vim
CC: @[email protected]