MacOS has a frustrating tendency to depend on external utilities for basic functions, but I've found Maccy to be as good as if not better than Windows clipboard manager. You can summon it with a keybinding or click on an icon in the menubar. It's really good and one of the first things I install on Mac.
They also cost a ton to service. It's nice if the sentiment of carrying something through the years appeals to you, but the thing that keeps me away from mechanical watches is the service costs compared to the odd battery replacement on a quartz.
Voice control tech is still very patchy, especially if you have an accent or a speech defect, or if it is not capable of handling colloquialisms or you calling a feature by a different name as intended. All of these things are common enough in practice, and the last thing I need when I am driving is to have to bark a command thrice to get what I need activated, and then bark more commands to undo whatever the car actually did by misunderstanding my commands.
Haha, that's fair. But also, is this the case in 99% of "modal" text editors? Because that's why these things are the way they are in vim.
There's nothing different about the modality of operation of a Tesla. You could switch the touchscreen to a physical console and not lose anything, but modality is central to how vim operates, and becomes more valuable as you get used to it and need it more.
Agreed. But in its defense, the software on my Kindle has remained the same level of bad for the last 8 years. Compared to my Android devices that have slowed down significantly.
We still use tortoiseSVN at work. It's crude but shockingly simple to use. Moving to git would be a significant expense just to train people not to break things and to get them used to CLI.