Same in Turkish; I think it may be Greek in origin. I used to think that it's baby-talk, like many other primordial words like 'mamma', 'baba', etc; but it doesn't seem to be universal like those.
I am afraid that the need to understand how tools work will never go out of fashion. Not everyone's horizons are limited to one-time quick & dirty solutions.
This is the gunslinger linux youtuber guy, right?; maybe he should try installing arch while reassembling his gun blindfolded, or some stupid gimmick of that sort; that would be a challenge.
Yeah; & by the way, warp is funding fzf, as there's a big thank you banner on fzf & fzf-vim's github pages nowadays. I'm glad fzf is getting support, of course; though it feels odd somehow.
You can define a bunch of aliases in any shell environment for that. Or use a history manager (a database client essentially) that groups commands you've entered so far based on frequency, return value, working dir. when they were issued etc.
chromium is based on a fork of webkit; webkit proper does remain -- I don't know how much of an influence google has on it though; all I 'know' is that it's Apple's adoption of a KDE project.
'surely you get ...' ---- not necessarily; contributions that satisfy feature requests are unlikely to be welcomed with open arms if they don't already fit the core maintainers' overall strategy. Some projects are very flexible about this; but Gnome is notoriously not.
... and even if the commissioned feature patch remains private, it might break on the next update, which would be a waste.
I think it's a dependency of readline.