![]() ![]() Love this terminal, I especially like being able to create keyboard shortcuts that run terminal commands. Still using this for all my MySQL stuff but the lack of JSON column support in a stable release is pushing me to try TablePlus again. It hasn't found its way into my main development workflow yet but I use it a lot for screencasting, presentations, and live streams. ![]() It lets you view all of the breakpoints for a site at the same time and also does a good job auto-scaling fixed size viewports to fit whatever window size you're using. ![]() Sizzy is a cool browser specifically for responsive design. I'd like to give Firefox another shot one day but for now still using Chrome for both development and general browsing. Any time I've tried something else I never like it as much, not even Operator Mono. Pretty sure this is the default font in Sublime on macOS. I've customized it a bit (in both Sublime and Code) to use a darker background to increase the contrast - not super important for my own work but looks better in screencasts. Tried a lot of themes but this is the one I keep coming back to. You can check out all of my VS Code settings here. Favorite feature it has over Sublime is the integrated terminal. It's not as good as Sublime at editing text but trying to give it an honest go these days because the community is so big and development is really active. Any time I try something else, within minutes I run into dozens of things it's missing or that Sublime does better. Still the most productive text editing environment I've ever used. Super expensive but worth every penny for me. I stand probably 25% of the time and don't really find the lack of presets to be a problem. It's quite big, really deep, and super stable. This desk has poor reviews for some reason but I think it's great. Usually just to scroll Twitter if my right hand is busy holding a drink. I keep this on the left hand side of my keyboard but it doesn't see much use. Used to think I preferred the trackpad after being a laptop-only user for so long, but I love the extra precision you get with a real mouse, especially for video and audio editing. They didn't make the wired version for very long so it can be hard to find but the wireless one takes AA batteries which is a huge pain. I can't stand the arrow keys on the keyboards Apple makes today so I use this relic instead. The display is absolutely gorgeous and has all the space I need so I love it, but this thing is designed for professional film production so a lot of the features I'm paying for with this thing are totally unnecessary for me. Every large monitor on the market except the Pro Display XDR has terrible pixel density, like 40" 4K displays for example - I had way more pixels than that in a 27" display! So if I wanted a bigger display and still wanted it to be Retina/HiDPI, the Pro Display XDR is literally the only thing that exists. I really wanted a display that was larger than my old 27" iMac, but I didn't want to compromise on pixel density to do it. This machine is more powerful than my iMac and feels just as portable as my 13" did - really love this computer. Prior to this I was using a 2015 5K iMac as my main machine and a 2014 13" MacBook Pro for travel. 16" MacBook Pro, 2.4ghz 8-Core i9, 32GB of RAM, AMD Radeon Pro 5500M 8GB Graphics (2019)
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