It's not hard at all, just a pip install away. Perhaps a rare uninstall later.
It sounds like you haven't read the full thread. It's common for younger developers to be slaves to "best practice" even in exceptions where it doesn't apply.
Appeal to authority is not a compelling argument either.
Promising but very barebones. Hard to do without syntax highlighting these days, for example. But I think it would be useful on a tiny machine with openwrt, as micro is huge there. ;-)
Before I used micro & ne I used nano, and configured the keybindings to work in the CUA style. I still have the dot files, didn't delete them, but they rarely get used anymore.
I think they recently added Ctrl+S to save by default, even if unconfigured, woohoo.
I suggest a systems administration course if you're having so much trouble with Python libs. It can help, knowing your way around the filesystem and how to use PATHs, etc.
I only ever had it a problem with large, poorly maintained projects from work. You know the kind that have two web frameworks required in the same project, and two orms, etc. ;-) That one I definitely put into a venv. But my stuff, no.
There is a movie player that would highlight the character/actor on screen at the moment you hit pause. There is a link to find out more that would take you to the appropriate web page with the info.
I want to say it was google play, but not completely sure.
It never came with a standardized package manager, and many user tools are ancient. Newer versions won't let you turn off telemetry services because they are started in a read-only boot volume. It's pretty but pretty dumb at times.
The PC market grew bottom up to be 10x the size of the workstation market during the 90s. Even with thinner margins, eventually workstation makers couldn't compete any longer on R&D spend.
The book The Innovator's Dilemma describes the process.
Why not critique the content instead?