Jynx [0],[1] and Jandal [2] phosted on their favorite programs, and use of the Unix console in particular. I love hearing about how other people work in the console so I can try out new utilities or ways of getting things done. My most-used console programs - in no particular order: - Emacs - mutt - lynx/elinks - screen - Perl - Bash - moc (an excellent music collection organizer/player) - curl - ssh - rsync And of course all of the standard Unix programs less, find, grep, sed, etc. I tend to use perl a lot in place of sed/awk, I'm pretty comfortable with perl5 and see no reason to not use it as a better replacement for those utilities [3]. I use vim at work sometimes, simply because it is available on every server I manage, even though I prefer emacs. I keep threatening to switch fully to vim but my muscle memory is strong with emacs - I also make heavy use of emacs' git integration, dired and ediff modes, so it's an extra hurdle for me to re-learn my workflow via the equivalent vim scripts or plugins. I do prefer an all-console environment, although during the day when I'm at work this is not possible. My work desktop is Debian Jesse and XFCE - this gives me all I need on that front. Otherwise my personal email and websites are on my own remotely hosted server, so my connection is via ssh and I use mutt for processing mail right on the server (same as on SDF). That is also Debian, although when it comes time to upgrade or move servers I will probably switch to one of the BSDs. The current move to systemd by pretty much all the mainstream Linux distros makes me ill. [0] gopher://sdf.org/0/users/jynx/dat/20171209.post [1] gopher://sdf.org/0/users/jynx/dat/20171209.post [2] gopher://grex.org/0/~jandal/phlog/favourite-programs-or-not [3] See 'Minimal Perl for Unix and Linux People' by Tim Maher