I'm a fan of Ptyxis, the latest terminal app for GNOME, but it's missing one key feature for me: tiling terminal functionality. I like opening and see different shells in my screen. As a result, I keep going back to the nice Tilix app.
@codeofamor@clickhere@drwho@alice However, Posteo has a valid reason for not supporting custom domains. The issue lies with some domain registrars, which can compromise user data through WHOIS queries, posing a risk to users' privacy. IMHO this is not entirely accurate, since numerous registrars offer privacy features.
@codeofamor@clickhere@drwho@alice It's a great list, and Posteo is amazing, but they don't support using your own domain, IMHO this is the only downside. I'm using Mailbox, they support domain, the service is great.
@b0rk Great post! I've simplified my development environment and couldn't be happier with the results. After spending years to tweak Zsh and Neovim, I've switched to Fish and Helix, primarily using their default configurations. Both tools offer great out-of-the-box settings, eliminating the need for extensive tweaking. For my terminal emulator, I've opted for the GNOME's default Ptyxis, just changing the font to Cascadia Mono NF.
@douglascamata I mean, make Zed to work nice with Python. I configured it to use ruff and open a terminal in the right virtualenv for each project using Fish. I basically followed the official documentation, but I also added some small tricks. I can share my settings.json if you want.
My default editor is Helix, which I've been using almost as an IDE. However, I've also been exploring Zed recently. After properly configuring Zed, I've found it to be really impressive, especially when working with large and complex projects.
Data engineer living in Germany. Things I write about: Python, Scala, Spark, Data Pipelines, Data Streaming, Databases, Security, Privacy, Open Source, Linux (Fedora)- Vegetarian 🌱 - Coffee guy ☕️ - INTJ Opinions and toots are my own.