Tmux has probably some specific features Kitty won't do as good as a native multiplexer? (sorry I'm not the right person to ask this question :s) but It has the features I'm looking for without the need to install one.
It was quite cumbersome to configure a terminal + a multiplexer on MacOS to behave how I liked it. Kitty solved this issue while being fast, simple and a lot of customization in one single app.
One feature that was really important, copy/past over SSH with Micro which involved quite a hacky thing with iTerm2 + Tmux.Also being able to split my windows, create tabs...
But as I said I have only basic use cases and can't really say If Kitty's multiplexing features are on par with Tmux. However, during my web search I read about a lot of people far more knowledge than myself who actually switch to kitty from Tmux without regrets !
Yeah Alacritty was my second pick, but after reading their documentation it seemed more for people accustomed to Vi and the like.
So yeah that's not something I'm willing to spare some time right now, anyway I'm mostly doing some "sys admin" stuff in my homelab, so simple text editing in a simple terminal is a better fit in my workflow/learning process !
Kitty is probably the best terminal emulator I've ever tried out... It even made me drop Tmux as multiplexer on my stupid Mac !
I only have basic use case right now, nothing complex but customization seems way above others.
The full OSC52 integration with micro for copy/past over SSH and taking up the terminal clipboard was also a game changer (nearly dropped micro because of this...)
I only scratched the surface and have only basic usage and still I can't believe one single person is behind this project (I think?).
Yeah most seedboxers are just the new leechers of this generation... Keeping up their ratio about an unreasonable amount where they can leech everything they want without the need to give back...
They just stay for the necessary amount of time specified by their private tracker and leave the queue afterwards.
IMO seedboxes should have another rule associated to them... Straight to 1 month seeding time or get a hit&run warning !
This really looks great, I got a question though. As I understand it, it works based on your bash_history which can be very small or autodeleted after each poweroff for privacy & security reasons.
So it doesn't work in that case. However, creating a file containing a list or array? Of commands could that be a possible way to implemented a similar behavior?
I'm asking because I'm not very proficient in any programming language but have done some small bash scripts here and there and quite interested in this functionality !
Tell that to my back/arm pain I had for months after a Ski accident... After 4 session and one good knack I literally felt how everything got back in place.
I felt so exhausted and somehow strange like a little bit drunk... But after a few weeks the pain went away ! Like magic !
So yeah, science can't prove everything but that doesn't mean it doesn't work or has some positive benefits ! Science has also been wrong numerous times or has been controlled by conflict of interests... What ever, choose your poison !
My god... I'm so confused by your comment XD ! OP's command is something I already came across, so I somehow got it... But your comment put me in total brain rot !
I'm not very acquainted with any programming language so maybe I'm wrong here (or I didn't get the joke? XD) but bash didn't change much in the past few years, I even read some scripts more than 10 years still works because the syntax stays the same (or doesn't change a lot ...)
Compared with the switch from python 2 -> python 3 I read a lot of people pulling their hair off xD
There's always a security risk, however if you are referring to librewolf from the AUR I would say it's "safe"?
It has 160 votes and a popularity of 14.73* which means there's a good chance someone more capable then we are, already looked at the PKGBUILD.
That's not a 100% proof of reliability but it's a good pointer to a healthy AUR build.
*The bin package has even more votes and popularity. It's the recommended way, because the other package compiles from source and can take a long time !
Yeah I learned that the hardway when comparing MacOS/linux USB speed...
Took like "seconds" on Linux. I looked quite dumb asking a question and asking for help on Lemmy while shitting (again) on my Mac !
I have somewhere in my notes a command to show interactively how the memory cache gets dumped into my USB stick.
Kinda boggus that's an over 20 years old known "issue".