After being a fish die-hard for like a decade I finally gave up and learned to embrace Bash for its ubiquity. I realized all I cared about in fish was the built-in autocomplete, colorized output, and history management, which I was able to bolt on in short order to Bash.
Now I use ble.sh [1] and Oh My Bash [2] and Atuin [3] and I love it.
This is really a field where I feel standardization is the better path. It's a similar feeling I get when I observe the vast array of notetaking apps I see made and think here is a place where it would be better to pick one FOSS solution and contribute.
> It's a similar feeling I get when I observe the vast array of notetaking apps I see made and think here is a place where it would be better to pick one FOSS solution and contribute.
I feel the opposite -- I use a commercial note-taking app for the same reason I use bash. It kinda sucks, but it's on all my devices, and the extra work imposed by the suckiness is more than made up for by familiarity and by not having to invest any energy to make it work seamlessly across my devices.
for note taking I've had best results with just markdown files and basic text editors (vi/vim/nvim, helix).
At this point, actually one single notes.md file, and I can just lazily search through that to find what I'm looking for.
Now I use ble.sh [1] and Oh My Bash [2] and Atuin [3] and I love it.
This is really a field where I feel standardization is the better path. It's a similar feeling I get when I observe the vast array of notetaking apps I see made and think here is a place where it would be better to pick one FOSS solution and contribute.
[1] https://github.com/akinomyoga/ble.sh
[2] https://github.com/ohmybash/oh-my-bash
[3] https://atuin.sh/