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Tide42 – A Fast, Minimalist CLI IDE for Terminal-Centric Devs

Technology
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  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

    OK What the hell man I love this in concept. Definitly not something I'd use, got my own setup and I like it quite alot, but fuck man I've always described NeoVim as a build it yourself text editor and you've said here "why stop at neovim?"

    Hell yeah my guy. That's such a cool way to at least get your environment running on any system. Would love to look into this to see if I can do something similar. Right now I just have a bash script that builds up my env.

  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

    designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience

    So, Acme for CLI?

  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

    great idea to just wrap existing tools! love that. now i just need to figure out how to switch out the editor...

  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

    I have a pretty complex nvim setup already for general editing. Is there any way this could handle all the custom nvim stuff somewhere else and leave my existing config alone? When I tried it just now it installed an init.vim next to my init.lua in ~/.config/nvim, which didn't clobber anything but did break both tide42 and normal nvim.

  • Hey devs,
    I recently wrapped the latest stable release of Tide42, a lightweight terminal-based IDE designed for speed, flexibility, and a clean coding experience — especially for those of us who live in the terminal.

    Tide42 integrates tmux, nvim, and thoughtful Bash scripting into a seamless dev workflow with:

    True 256-color support (color toggle with -c)

    Elegant, fast session layout using tmux

    Self-updating mechanism (--update) to pull the latest version from GitHub

    Multi-distro install script for Debian, Arch, macOS (via apt, pacman, brew)

    Respectful config handling – never overwrites your dotfiles

    Simple interactive file launcher (tide42 <filename>)

    Quiet mode for scripts (-q)

    Try it out:
    GitHub: github.com/logicmagix/tide42
    License: GPLv3
    Clone, install, and run tide42 to get started.

    Emacs has panes. Is this supposed to imitate a fraction of the holy power? 😉

  • How a Spyware App Compromised Assad’s Army

    Technology technology
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    0 Aufrufe
    S
    I guess that's why you pay your soldiers. In the early summer of 2024, months before the opposition launched Operation Deterrence of Aggression, a mobile application began circulating among a group of Syrian army officers. It carried an innocuous name: STFD-686, a string of letters standing for Syria Trust for Development. ... The STFD-686 app operated with disarming simplicity. It offered the promise of financial aid, requiring only that the victim fill out a few personal details. It asked innocent questions: “What kind of assistance are you expecting?” and “Tell us more about your financial situation.” ... Determining officers’ ranks made it possible for the app’s operators to identify those in sensitive positions, such as battalion commanders and communications officers, while knowing their exact place of service allowed for the construction of live maps of force deployments. It gave the operators behind the app and the website the ability to chart both strongholds and gaps in the Syrian army’s defensive lines. The most crucial point was the combination of the two pieces of information: Disclosing that “officer X” was stationed at “location Y” was tantamount to handing the enemy the army’s entire operating manual, especially on fluid fronts like those in Idlib and Sweida.
  • Researchers develop recyclable, healable electronics

    Technology technology
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    2 Aufrufe
    T
    Isn't the most common failure modes of electronics capacitors dying, followed closely by heat in chips? This research sounds cool and all.
  • Generative AI's most prominent skeptic doubles down

    Technology technology
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    Z
    I don't think so, and I believe not even the current technology used for neural network simulations will bring us to AGI, yet alone LLMs.
  • Google is Using AI to Censor Independent Websites

    Technology technology
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    P
    Bullshit Capitalism at its core that you allow free trading. And. It. Has. Been. Successful. Capitalism is what killed the USSR by sheer force. The problem arises when it's not controlled at all. Apply those rules well and you get a powerhouse generating huge progress for everyone and the taxes and all will be able to pay for the social security network on top of that ensuring nobody gets left behind You can go to communism Island if you want and suffer under economic mismanagent, bit I'd rather have capitalism, thank you
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    M
    Are most people in "the west" worse off today than they were 150 years ago? Are there fewer well functioning democracies than there were then? Has no minority group seen any improvement in their freedom? Has there been no improvement in how people interact with each other? No improvement in poverty?
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    Niemand hat geantwortet
  • 66 Stimmen
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    F
    HE is amazing. their BGP looking glass tool is also one of my favorite troubleshooting tools for backbone issues. 10/10 ISP
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    swelter_spark@reddthat.comS
    Yeah, I don't prefer that. But with some things I feel like it's barely a downside, and I'd put Boxes into that category. It's useful and well-designed enough in terms of functionality that I'm willing to overlook the Gnominess.