Best name to call it is to just not call it anything. Don't talk about it. Let it die.
xoggy
I do use helix but haven't taken advantage of the git integration. Maybe I'm unaware of its power.
For fish, I defined my own fish_prompt function with an indicator if there are uncommitted changes. It's just running git status
under the hood. I have a TODO in that function to run a pijul diff
in the directory if git status
returns nothing...
Wow I forgot all about this band. I love the comment "Red Djent Redemption"
The 1.0 is in beta. There has been a lot of refactoring to get it to this point. I would say there's still many quality-of-life features missing that would stop me from using it in a professional setting but for hobby projects it's meeting my needs (and gets better with each new beta build). They only have a few project backers but the main developer has been working very steadily on it.
This is actually why I prefer using pijul. I don't want to commit my secrets to a git repo and nix will refuse to build because I'm pulling in files that aren't tracked. Simple solution is to not make the flake directory a git repo and it won't complain. That's my solution at least. I also prefer using git (and therefore pijul) via cli rather than as a text editor integration so my experience differs.
I use it for self hosting because all I need installed is sshd and the pijul package. Then I can set my server's ;p as my remote. The "nest" web UI (the Pijul equvivalent to git tea) is in development and not open source yet, but you can use the hosted version at https://nest.pijul.com/ if you're curious.
Upvoting a classic. Watch his other talks too. Entertaining and thought provoking.
But it's Linus so everybody likes to think everything he says is blunt and crass.
I used both for years but always preferred weechat with the nicklist enabled and at the top, so that it didn't break urls or selecting multi-line text. Although the nicklist feature is moot for huge irc channels the ui and user experience is overall better with weechat in my opinion.
I think you're underestimating how impossible a task it is for China to hit a moving target. Even so, their move towards isolationism is at odds with an industry that has the most complex and globally integrated supply chain in existence.