this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2026
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[โ€“] Michal@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

it is faster, but also has higher mental load, and more more likely you;ll shoot yourself in the foot. if you accidentally delete something via bad command, its gone. In file manager, you an recover file from the bin.

no. 1 starts with "open file manager", while its commandline counterpart does not start with "open terminal"

no. 2 is a strawman, you can just select all files, and rename it. the file manager will append the number.

no. 4 is a dedicated utility that allows you to graphically view and drill down the folders. Example is based off "file manager"...

I've been using the terminal since forever, it has become second nature to me now. The only time I ever load up graphical applications is to load games or browse the web. And honestly it feels slow as hell, not because the UI or system is physically slow but because so many UIs feel like they get in the way.

Kind of like how Cypher in the matrix says he doesn't even see the code anymore, it's just second nature. It can be hard at first but I rarely make mistakes these days, and when I do, they're usually syntax errors.