![]() Support web terminal, transfer files and directories between local and remote servers over the web.Support native terminal, does not require terminal to support, just use trzsz ssh x.x.x.x to login.Support Windows server, not only can run on Windows client, but also can run on Windows ssh server. ![]() Support breakpoint resume, trz -y or tsz -y xxx overwrite exiting files will auto resume from breakpoint.Support transfer directories, trz -d to upload directories, tsz -d xxx to download xxx directories.Support tmux, including tmux normal mode, and tmux command mode integrated with iTerm2.Tmux is not going to support rz / sz ( 906, 1439 ), and creating a new tools is much easier than patching tmux. In this case, lrzsz ( rz / sz ) is convenient to use, but unfortunately it's not compatible with tmux. Tl/dr, Linux is a cheap, pig-ugly tank of an OS that will, with constant, careful tweaking by someone who really knows what they’re doing, smash its way through any problem you throw at it… OSX is an elegant, super-expensive combination of hardware and software that generally works very well works for similar things Linux excels at, plus graphics/creative stuff that Linux generally does not excel at, but can’t be altered at a root level or tweaked like linux can.Trzsz ( trz / tsz ) is a simple file transfer tools, similar to lrzsz ( rz / sz ), and compatible with tmux.Ĭonsidering laptop -> hostA -> hostB -> docker -> tmux, using scp or sftp is inconvenience. Build quality + integration between soft/hardware us in most cases, miles better on Mac than Linux, you get what you pay for, and bar the Dell XPS machines I don’t really see much competition in that regard. Surprisingly enough, there is a visible difference between stuff created by single devs for free and stuff created by teams with $multi-million budgets at a $multi-billion company. That being said, overall, Linux (any distro) is going to be ugly as sin lots of stuff feels half done, things break relatively often, lots of stuff is deeply user-unfriendly. Linux is fantastic for development, haven’t had too many issues in that regard, for CLI tooling, it’s phenomenal. ![]() I use Linux at home (Arch/Antergos) and OSx at work. I unfortunately found that choosing both was the solution for me. I use VS Code, and iTerm with the built in apps on MacOS. Thinkpads are extremely linux friendly and the computer is lightning fast. I use the trackpoint more and keyboard bindings on again IMHO what is the best keyboard on any laptop on the market. Now I run i3wm on the Thinkpad, so I’m not as worried about the… decent trackpad. That being said I love the iMessage integration, the screen is gorgeous, and IMHO there is not anything on the market in any way that comes close to the trackpad user experience of my MBP. I may not own the MBP if it weren’t for native iOS. If I were stuck on an island and could only have one it would be the T460 hands down. I currently run both MacOS on 13" MBP and Arch Linux on a Thinkpad T460. Run 16.04LTS on your Thinkpad and call it a day. For the OP I would recommend running Ubuntu as it has probably the easiest learning curve with the largest community. Just keep in mind that Pop_OS! is a newer distro/spin and a lot of the effort behind it is to get it running well on their (system76) machines.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |