 So, the other week I bought a new Windows laptop. How come? I was curious whether, it's been a few years since I've really used Windows heavily, and I was curious what the front end workflow and the command line workflow look like there. So, what was the front end tooling system like now? So, the command line workflow, the front end tooling workflow isn't massively different, but to get your command line workflow on part of these days still requires a little bit of work. So, what I was used to when I played with Windows a few years ago was like the Windows prompt, which is like this really very, very basic update to the DOS prompt. Always seemed like better for just managing files than anything super serious. Yeah, it did always just feel like I was exploring my hard drive and all that. Yeah, I didn't play with utilities there and stuff, but Microsoft then did PowerShell, which is like way better in design for automation, had much better support for objects and variables, and had these really rich prompts for commandlets. But it comes with support for audit completion right out of the box. So, I kind of, that's what I want from a show. It's kind of things that you can take for granted with things like OSX and Linux, like their terminals just come with all that stuff. It's just stock. So, another thing that we commonly do on Mac is we have like .files set up with all of our aliases, and you can create your own PowerShell profile that's got the same type of stuff set up. Okay. So, you can like create aliases for, you know, SublimeTax, so Subl or ST will go and fire off Sublime. So, you can create like system-level aliases. You can use DOS key as well, which is another utility for just creating aliases. But PowerShell is great. It doesn't quite get you all the way. There's still a few things missing. Yeah. So, like another tool that I use is Khanimu, which is a console emulator, and it's got support for multiple tabs. Nice. So, if there's something there, you can do vertical tab splitting as well and all sorts of other layout. That's quite nice. Config. So, that's pretty nice. But, again, it still feels like you're... It's just things that I've grown to expect, I guess, or want. Yeah. Like, it's what I see. If it was removed from me, I'd probably instantly just be like, please, can I have the tabs back now? Yeah. So, I use Khanimu, but there's still other things missing. So, the tool that I mostly use these days is Commander. And Commander is awesome. Why is it awesome? Because I said so. It's awesome because it's like a power utility with all of this stuff. So, it's got Khanimu. It's got PowerShell. It's using all that stuff. Oh, so it's like a group of all the best things just in one bundle. Exactly. It's also got Clink, which is... Basically, it's the Windows shell combined with Readline, which is a GNU library for working with Bash. It gives you better audit completion. It gives you history search and Bash utilities. Nice. Really nice. And my favorite thing about Commander is the integration that you can set up with other apps. So, something I've tried to do over the last couple of years with Sublime is try to get like my editor on screen with my command line just like built in. Just somewhere else in the UI, yeah. And none of the integrations I've ever seen have looked half decent. Yeah, I tried one plugin on Atom and it was just... It was sort of like my terminal, but it wasn't quite and it was a bit clunky. Yeah, so this just adds it in. Yeah, it just adds it in. You have like a single window. Drag it around. You've got your command line at the top. You've got your complete editor window at the bottom. And it's completely configurable. So, like, you can tell it to take up how much of the command line window you want. You can script that. Okay, yep. It's kind of neat. So, you've got that. Commander also encourages you to install PoshGit, which is a set of utilities on top of Git. So, if I go and I clone a project on GitHub and, you know, I CD into it, I can like make some edits and do Git and type in a command. So, Git C. And then I can tap through all the options, like commit and all that other stuff. It's just sort of nice, nice contextual auto-completion. Nice little bit of sugar on top. Yeah, exactly. What do you think about package managers? Could you use another one in your life? No, like, I've got app to get on Linux and that, to me, just makes total sense. Homebrew is the closest thing, I think, on Mac that I have, but then it has its own weird oddities on my machines normally. I'm hearing that you want another package manager. You're hearing me wrong, but fine. So, you want another package manager. And Windows has got one. Okay. It's called Choclity. It doesn't sound like a package manager, but fine. Just how is Choclity? Is it good? Choclity is decent. You're using Adam. Adam, you've got your hipster sticker over there. Yeah, you've got your sticker. So, you can do Choco install, Adam. Just install. It gives you an update, progress bar in your command line and everything. To be fair, with things like that, the minute you start getting used to it, it's really, really nice. I don't know. It's nice not having to go to a website, download the thing, open up VXE, and then do all the other stuff. So, that's nice. Does it update as well? I think so. Nice.