Wow, das macht traurig und wütend. Und ein Vierteljahrhundert später ist es scheinbar unverändert.
stetech
You mean the guy struggling with arm-hand coordination and almost falling over while standing still from reaching an arm out?
To be honest, I think I prefer the Emacs one due to how absurd it is: https://youtu.be/urcL86UpqZc
But all of them are hilarious.
Helix is “it just works” but it actually does, without having to get lost in the (config) sauce.
It’ll be unstoppable once they finalize and ship the plugin system.
Edit: and I haven’t even mentioned the descriptions above commands, the command palette-like functionality in <Space-?>
, nor the tutor yet. It’s just so much more beginner-friendly.
The Unix principle of piping between two or even multiple programs, together with “all data should be in the simplest common format possible” (that is, largely unformatted strings), was a really clever invention to be popularized. As proven by the fact it is still so useful decades later on a myriad of computers unimaginably more powerful than what they had back then.
It’s not perfect by any means (alternative title: why something like Nushell exists), but it’s pretty good all things considered I dare say.
- Traffic
- Phone (CarPlay/Android Auto (yes I know Tesla doesn’t have them, a garbage decision you’ll have to live with if you bought one))
- Remote (app) features
- Don’t care/want/need, plus security risk. If you really can’t do without, use WiFi when at home, and no-idea-what for when on the go.
- Music
- See point 1, also “dumb” media devices via Bluetooth/USB should be possible.
Good and true point, but arguably most NASs are built to be used, not to be not-used…