How was it? What programs did you use?
I want to try it, but the browser thing is a deal breaker I think.
I try to make a habit of using the terminal for as much as I can, which honestly is a lot. I’ve even found a way to use it at work.
One day, I plan to run Linux without a window manager, maybe even without xorg entirely, using the tty’s exclusively.
How do you plan to browse the internet?
Trying to use the tui browsers would be pure torture for me. Pictures, icons, custom colors, sizing and layouts are so integral to the web… hell even markdown in a terminal isn’t ideal since it can’t do header sizes.
Tuis do make sense for a lot of things, but not for media heavy things like the web.
There are things like w3m and other text browsers. I could maybe even get away with curl if I knew it better.
I watch a lot of YouTube, so I could maybe utilize the YouTube downloader cli tool so I can watch them locally.
dude i tried this cause i also watch a lot (admittedly, too much) youtube and it’s just too much of a bother on my slow ass machine. invidious helps.
Some video players (like mpv) allow you to stream directly from Youtube, with no need to download the full thing.
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tbh, i also just ended up this way out of habit. the only thing i need outside of my terminal is my hardened firefox. i’ve tried surf and other similar browser’s but i do plenty of web development for myself/school/contract gigs so i can’t reasonably escape the browser world.
I once had a really old lappy that I decided to run only in frame buffer mode. After I got a working mouse (for copy pasta) and screen (for backgrounding) it was actually fairly pleasant. Browsing the web, particularly. Ads are image / video based so those were automatically blocked and if I really wanted to see an image I could. Most websites have a really bad signal to noise ratio that was automaticlly filtered for me. I could even watch videos with VLC frame buffer support.
I have tried, I used w3m as a browser and nano as the text editor. I feel like it can be done, just not well. LibreWolf, LibreOffice, and Thunderbird are real deal breakers for me.
I live about 90% in various terminal windows.
I’m multi-machine and play in my homelab stuff a lot, so I sit in mosh/tmux/vim all day long. This has been my usual experience for a long long time. My experimentation tends to be on the GUI side of things, trying out this “vs code” thing everyone is talking about…
but I’ll still never live without a GUI, browsing sucks so hard in a terminal now. It’s basically unworkable.
I’m not sure if terminal only itself is the end goal, but designing applications for a terminal by default forces less bloat and a keyboard driven user experience. I wouldn’t mind Neovim under a graphical editor for visual improvements, but nothing compares to the terminal version.
recently i have been able to survive with ease in a bare terminal environment for an extended period of time.
browsing using lynx is not that bad. although i feel like these tui browsers could be designed in a more modern way that shifts away from simplicity and adds some simple useful features and is conscious of practical need of a serious user.
browsing is like detox for a short time until your brain gets re-calibrated to reading text carefully.
after a while… you eventually hit a monster problem that requires maximum resources. and then it seems like the intuitive point and click tab whack-a-mole is superior when wading through bullshit mazes of links. i plan on going back to the bare terminal.
to do that i will benefit immensely from:- better scripting skills and competency (such as bash)
- practice or mastery of tmux to an intermediate level
- really need more advanced search tools than is commonly available. probably build my own search engine (and maybe crawler).
- some more familiarity of lynx would be nice. i know it grows with with time.
it’s workable today. i hope that the workflow can be streamlined to the point that i almost never have to use xorg. (not for political reasons… just because the terminal does average out to be equivalently productive to desktop applications, with the benefit of being lighter,faster,scriptable, and less distracting.)
Back in 2013 / 2014 I had an A- Korean monitor, trying to get that thing to cooperate with X.org was a nightmare. I think it took me about a week to finally get X working and in the meantime I was only able to use the CLI. That was my baptism of fire into the Linux terminal haha.
Honestly, it is not practical to exclusively use a CLI in 2021. If you need to work on spreadsheets, make presentations, use web apps, do any graphical work, or use video conferencing, etc it’s gonna be rough. Even where CLI applications exist for these tasks they usually have a far steeper learning curve, a less efficient workflow, and the files produced don’t always render correctly in the graphical applications that everyone else is using.
I have tried. Nano, w3m, nmtui, and maybe apt.
My work is exclusively remote RHEL headless servers. So
tmux
,vim
,ranger
andhtop
is where I work. Unless I have to attend a meeting, then its Outlook and Teams.No because why would I? Various things, like browsing the web as you mentioned, aren’t made for the terminal. I see literally no point in trying to use the terminal for everything, I already have enough use-cases for it.
I3wm here. I haven’t used a real linux DE since I ran Unity on my netbook. I use terminal apps for almost everything except web browsing and
krita
I don’t think I could ever give up GUI completely. I would not be able to work without GUI tools for coding, making presentations, editing documents, etc. I don’t want to memorize terminal commands for things that are easier / quicker to get done with a GUI. Also, what about gaming?
Around 10 years ago after the radeon xorg driver broke for the nth time on my arch install, I decided to just ditch Xorg altogether. I used screen for multiplexing, mutt for mail, irssi and some other messanger and w3m with (framebuffer support for images) for browsing the interwebs. I also had a videoplayer. I think it was mplayer. I rocked that setup for almost a year during college. Fun times.