re 1: out of curiosity, do you encounter dnsleaks when using wireguard?
re 4: you can also check out https://starship.rs/, which helps configure shell prompt very intuitively with a toml file.
re 1: out of curiosity, do you encounter dnsleaks when using wireguard?
re 4: you can also check out https://starship.rs/, which helps configure shell prompt very intuitively with a toml file.
As much as I despise snap, this instance bring some questions into how other popular cross-linux platform app stores like flathub and nix-channels/packages provide guardrails against malwares.
I’m aware flathub has a “verified” checks for packages from the same maintainers/developers, but I’m unsure about nix-channels. Even then, flathub packages are not reviewed by anyone, are they?
Not related to warp, but just out of curiosity, which protocols have you tried? In one or two univs I visited, I had to switch to TCP instead UDP for it to work. Not sure why.
Others have mentioned using interactive tools like zoxide
to easily get to frequently visited directories.
In addition, I also use nnn
(https://github.com/jarun/nnn), which is a terminal file manager that you can navigate through. You can create shortcuts, snippets and bookmarks with this. I use this and zoxide
+ fzf
regularly on CLI to navigate.
Some here also mention ranger
, which is another terminal file manager. In my limited experience with ranger
, I feel like the start up time is much slower than nnn
; but I haven’t tried much. Tho with ranger
+ graphic-accelerated terminals like kitty
, I believe you can preview images and files, which seems to be a great feature. So it depends on your need.
to add on to this, cheat with some similar functions to tldr but also allows editing and writing one’s one cheat sheet
omg that is lovely. Kinda like https://regex101.com/ for regular expressions.
lol I know it’s a GUI. I asked not to be snarky but to know whether functionally they do the same thing, so I/people who have used the CLI can evaluate whether we miss anything when using that command.
what’s the difference between flatsweep and using flatpak uninstall —unused —delete-data
?
If you use other package managers like flatpak
, nix-env
(for non-NixOS), npm
(for global stuff), … you can just create a bash script to list all installed packages for each manager, and save to a file(s). I put them in a git repo to version control these lists, which are updated every now and then when I update stuff.
Based on this reddit comment, that website is not affiliated with the
magic-wormhole
CLI tool