tifkap an hour ago

vi(m), sc (the spreatsheet), awk, Perl (for quick oneliners), mutt, grep, tcpdump

solardev 3 hours ago

Gmail is pretty ancient now. Webstorm too.

benoau a day ago

Assuming you mean phone, I think every app I use is more than 10 years old. The app ecosystem has not been worth exploring in many years for me.

I bet most of the app installs these days are just kids tapping misleading ads they see in bad games.

codingdave a day ago

cmd.exe came out in '82, so it is 7 years ahead of bash which was '89, so I think it wins.

mycroft_4221 a day ago

Total Commander - https://www.ghisler.com/

Swiss army knife for file/SFTP/… operations on Windows

  • tifkap an hour ago

    On windows it is still my go-to filemanager (although double commander does the same)

schappim a day ago

For me it is an old version of FlyingLogic before they went subscription only.

Uzmanali a day ago

WinSCP and IrfanView.

api a day ago

The obvious answer is CLI stuff like bash, grep, sed, xargs, tar, etc. The shell suite found on Linux and macOS systems can contain code dating back to the 1980s. There’s some really ancient code in there. No need to change it.

For UI apps there’s not much I use that’s that old.

j4nek 21 hours ago

my mail user agent says: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)