Years ago I forked bash-it into gaudi-bash and rewrote large parts of it, cleaner architecture, async theme rendering, better component management, and a curated set of plugins that actually work well together. It became my daily driver for bash.
Then I started using zsh more. And I hit a gap.
The zsh ecosystem has plenty of frameworks and plugin managers oh-my-zsh, prezto, antidote, zinit, zplug, sheldon, zgenom, antigen, among others. But they all solve a different problem: they manage zsh-specific plugin installation and loading. None of them give you the workflow I was used to; an intuitive enable plugin fzf / disable alias git CLI, symlink-based component management, profiles to save and switch configurations, or a single search command to find what's available across aliases, plugins, and completions. And critically, none of them work across shells.
On the bash side, the options are even more limited. bash-it (which gaudi-bash forked from) is essentially the only framework with a comparable component management approach.
I found myself context-switching between two completely different mental models depending on which shell I opened. Different config patterns, different commands, different plugin ecosystems.
gaudi-shell closes that gap. One framework, one CLI, one set of components across bash and zsh.
I'd be happy to accept the return if it was within reason, but this claim seem to be outrageous, and more on Apple than eBay as why they claim their batteries can last for 10 hours.
I feel I'd be obliged to accept the return but my fear is getting back a damaged or beyond laptop, and all in all its just an unpleasant experience
I agree you with on this .. its not about making money at all and would accept a return within reason. It seems that eventually I'd have to, and I wonder what the laptop would look like when its back
1) For those who never put an ad on eBay before, when you finalizing your listing, you have this "FREE" word floating around the submit button, making you think that listing on eBay is free and how do they get money you say? well thats when you want to purchase addons or bump your add (or so the naive person inside me thought). The laptop was sold within hours of the listing, and the usual payment went through Paypal on hold until the shipment is sent. This is when you first realise that Paypal (which is owned by eBay) takes some fees to process your payment .. i was ok with that .. it was less than 60 USD on the transaction
2) Few days ago, I received a bill from eBay telling me that I have to pay close to 200 USD as ad fees, as it turns out that eBay takes a percentage on every transaction that happens.. I swallowed that too and made the payment .. in the end its on me not reading properly (but the devil in me completely blames eBay for not being transparent on this .. a simple fee calculator before you submit the ad is really minimal work)
Then I started using zsh more. And I hit a gap.
The zsh ecosystem has plenty of frameworks and plugin managers oh-my-zsh, prezto, antidote, zinit, zplug, sheldon, zgenom, antigen, among others. But they all solve a different problem: they manage zsh-specific plugin installation and loading. None of them give you the workflow I was used to; an intuitive enable plugin fzf / disable alias git CLI, symlink-based component management, profiles to save and switch configurations, or a single search command to find what's available across aliases, plugins, and completions. And critically, none of them work across shells.
On the bash side, the options are even more limited. bash-it (which gaudi-bash forked from) is essentially the only framework with a comparable component management approach.
I found myself context-switching between two completely different mental models depending on which shell I opened. Different config patterns, different commands, different plugin ecosystems.
gaudi-shell closes that gap. One framework, one CLI, one set of components across bash and zsh.