Same. Magit 99% of the time and CLI for the one percent where I need to run an obscure command. Magit is genuinely one of the best things in Emacs besides org mode.
There’s a video from Ryan Fortnine that goes into detail on why s-pedelec poles are a death trap. Worth watching. Just FYI, he talks about those bikes that go 45km/h.
QWERTY at about 130-140 wpm, but not 10 finger. 10 finger ortholinear about 100 wpm, and about 90 wpm on staggered. As I was trying workman, I managed to type at about 50-60 wpm.
I daily Asahi. Pros: I am fast af, and I love the system. Cons: battery life is much worse (good 30-40% less battery life), battery drain while sleep is high, HDMI over USB C hub doesn’t work. All things considered, I daily it instead of MacOS.
That’s the thing, my definition shouldn’t really matter. For me, war games are the hex and counter games, in any scale. But I understand it when people say warhammer is a war game. I consider it a tabletop miniature game.
Now see, as a war gamer (ASL, GMT, Colombia games) I wouldn’t consider Warhammer a true “wargame”, but the definition has changed over the years. WotR and Root are considered “wargames” these days.
Whilst you can download it and use it, I recommend you either start with a starter pack, or something like Doom or Spacemacs. Else, you’ll spend a couple of years before you get anything done.
If minimalism is what you’re looking for, Emacs is going to be your last station and I seriously recommend it to you.
With Emacs: I check my mail, read news, code, keep notes, work on spreadsheets, manage my to-do, use it as my calendar, talk with ai, chat on Matrix and Discord, manage all my git repositories.
You can use it to browse the web, listen to music and do about 1,000 other things. All from the same program, all with the same shortcuts.
Fully hackable, fully customizable, fully self-documenting and fully free.
Ich (mit braunem Haut und langer Bart, der gestern Tickets für Spiel 25 gekauft hat) so 🥸