this post was submitted on 04 Apr 2025
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Text-Based User Interfaces (TUI; CLI) 💻🖮
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Forum for advanced users who grok the power of text-based apps, the advantage of tmux/GNU screen, the keyboard and who often find the mouse a hinderance to a fast workflow. A text-based UI is also a decent escape from enshitified resources.
This forum broadly covers tools, hacks, and advocacy of text-based environments.
Slightly marginally kind of related:
- !sustainabletech@lemmy.sdf.org
- !permacomputing@lemmy.sdf.org
- !uiux@lemmy.sdf.org
- !mindful_tech@lemmy.sdf.org
- !keyboards@lemmy.sdf.org
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You just wrote your response using an app that’s dysfunctional offline. You had to be online.
Perhaps before your time, Usenet was the way to do forums. Gnus (an emacs mode) was good for this. Gnus would fetch everything to my specification and store a local copy. It served as an offline newsreader. I could search my local archive of messages and the search was not constrained to a specific tool (e.g. grep would work, but gnus was better). I could configure it to grab all headers for new msgs in a particular newsgroup, or full payloads. Then when disconnected it was possible to read posts. I never tested replies because I had other complexities in play (mixmaster), but it was likely possible to compose a reply and sync/upload it later when online. The UX was similar to how mailing lists work.
None of that is possible with Lemmy. It’s theoretically possible given the API, but the tools don’t exist for that.
Offline workflows were designed to accommodate WAN access interruptions, but an unforeseen benefit was control. Having your own copy naturally gives you a bit of control and censorship resilience.
(update) Makes no sense that I have to be online to read something I previously wrote. I sometimes post some useful bit of information but there are only so many notes I can keep organised. Then I later need to recall (e.g. what was that legal statute that I cited for situation X?) If I wrote it into a Lemmy post, I have to be online to find it again. The search tool might be too limited to search the way I need to.. and that assumes the host I wrote it on is even still online.