I'm a Systems Reliability and DevOps engineer for Netdata Inc. When not working, I enjoy studying linguistics and history, playing video games, and cooking all kinds of international cuisine.
The two biggest in terms of physical tools for me are probably my Peak Design Everyday Backpack (I backed the project on Kickstarter, got it almost 2.5 years ago, have used it every day since, and it still shows no signs of wear despite me being rather rough with it), and my SwiftPoint Z (best gaming mouse I've ever used, only complaint is that it has no way to configure it to not present as a game controller in addition to a mouse (means I can't use it for some poorly designed games that ignore mouse/keyboard input if they see a controller)).
As far as software, Vim, Powerline, and ZSH are probably the biggest ones in terms of my favorites for day-to-day usage.
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The two biggest in terms of physical tools for me are probably my Peak Design Everyday Backpack (I backed the project on Kickstarter, got it almost 2.5 years ago, have used it every day since, and it still shows no signs of wear despite me being rather rough with it), and my SwiftPoint Z (best gaming mouse I've ever used, only complaint is that it has no way to configure it to not present as a game controller in addition to a mouse (means I can't use it for some poorly designed games that ignore mouse/keyboard input if they see a controller)).
As far as software, Vim, Powerline, and ZSH are probably the biggest ones in terms of my favorites for day-to-day usage.