Good things =========== Windows 95 ---------- // TODO: Include a screenshot. Most applications followed design guidelines, giving a unified and simple UI. Could be reasonably well controlled from the keyboard. SerenityOS ---------- https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity // TODO: Include a screenshot. A project with a much larger scope than Haven but with somewhat similar goals, to create a nice new environment. Gives proof that such a project can be written in few people, given proper experience. ToaruOS ------- https://github.com/klange/toaruos Similarly to SerenityOS, this proves that one can write an entire operating system from scratch. Somewhat sadly, it just replicates the Linux desktop without trying to make any fundamental changes whatsoever. Still, it makes for a very interesting data point. Haiku ----- Pretty. Desktop-first. Just the window manager sucks, and C++ is no longer a reasonable choice for a high-level programming language, despite all the effort to improve it--it's the foundations that are rotten. VIM --- Customizable modal text editor allowing for rather efficient editing. While the internals might not be so great, the user interface is hard to beat once you get used to it. With https://github.com/prabirshrestha/vim-lsp/[vim-lsp] it even shines as an IDE, which is a wonderful development. Qt Creator ---------- // TODO: Include a screenshot. Has a very good VIM emulator (rare!), excellent code navigation on top of that, clean UI. Primarily a C++ IDE, yet slowly the Language Server Protocol implementation makes it transcend into a general-purpose one. Vimperator/Pentadactyl/qutebrowser ---------------------------------- // TODO: Include a screenshot. Vimperator/Pentadactyl created a new standard in web browser usability. The most important innovations being the addition of modality to the web browser and the "follow link" feature, which is what I feel all mouse-first UIs deserve. Too bad it can no longer work in current versions of Firefox as they cut off all support for XUL addons. The good times are already behind us. I certainly enjoyed them. qutebrowser went somewhat beyond in terms of how neat the integration of a VIM interface and a web browser engine can be, rebuilding the concept on top of Webkit, but to this day it lacks a normal AdBlock, and thus remains a toy. SourceHut --------- https://sourcehut.org/ Drew might be an opinionated asshole but that's not necessarily a bad quality, especially if it helps with diversity. His creations are compatible with my values. WikiWikiWeb ----------- http://wiki.c2.com/ An interesting knowledge base. Simple formatting, automatic links. I've borrowed the general concept for this very wiki (yes, technically you can send in pull requests). It's a shame that it's been frozen in time. AsciiDoc -------- I despise Markdown for its choices, and I don't want to suffer while writing. Granted, I can see some faults in AsciiDoc as well, notably with how hard it is to parse and process, but I haven't found anything better yet, and standardisation seems to be finally https://groups.google.com/g/asciidoc/c/EKx-Hfx-nMM[on the way]. One day I might create a processor for a slightly modified subset of it. Until then, https://github.com/bytesparadise/libasciidoc[libasciidoc] is what I'll be using for all markup, and I'm immensely thankful to its authors for their work. Plan 9, Go ---------- Pervasive simplicity. Sometimes it's annoying (one could say '`misplaced`') but overall you get the feeling you have the entire platform under your control. Oberon OS --------- An exercise in vertical integration, going as deep down as the CPU. Also something completely different from what you can find today, exploring a new way of controlling the computer. Smalltalk --------- The application is a live system, powered by a simple programming language. You can change anything you want, and see the results instantly. See also the Self programming language, for which my friend is trying to make an https://github.com/Bystroushaak/tinySelf[alternative implementation].