My setup
My daily drivers—hardware, software and workflow
Update: I now maintain a uses page. This post is out of date.
Hardware
The only computer I have with me is my HP Envy 13 (2018) (my model looks a little different). It’s a 13” ultrabook, with an i5 8250u, 8 gigs of RAM and a 256 GB NVMe SSD. It’s a very comfy machine that does everything I need it to.
For my phone, I use a OnePlus 6T, running stock OxygenOS. As of this writing, its bootloader hasn’t been unlocked and nor has the device been rooted. I’m also a proud owner of a Nexus 5, which I really wish Google rebooted. It’s surprisingly still usable and runs Android Pie, although the SIM slot is ruined and the battery backup is abysmal.
My watch is a Samsung Gear S3 Frontier. Tizen is definitely better than Android Wear.
My keyboard, although not with me in college, is a very old Dell SK-8110. For the little bit of gaming that I do, I use a HP m150 gaming mouse. It’s the perfect size (and color).
For my music, I use the Bose SoundLink II. Great pair of headphones, although the ear cups need replacing.
And the software
My distro of choice for the past ~1 year has been elementary
OS. I used to be an Arch Linux elitist, complete
with an esoteric window manager, all riced. I now use whatever
JustWorks™.
Update: As of June 2019, I’ve switched over to a vanilla Debian 9 Stretch install, running i3 as my window manager. If you want, you can dig through my configs at my dotfiles repo.
Here’s a (riced) screenshot of my desktop.
Most of my work is done in either the browser, or the terminal. My shell
is pure zsh, as in no plugin frameworks. It’s
customized using built-in zsh functions. Yes, you don’t actually need
a framework. It’s useless bloat. The prompt itself is generated using
a framework I built in Nim—nicy. My primary text editor is
nvim. Again, all configs in my dotfiles repo
linked above. I manage all my passwords using
pass(1), and I use
rofi-pass to access them via
rofi
.
Most of my security tooling is typically run via a Kali Linux docker container. This is convenient for many reasons, keeps your global namespace clean and a single command to drop into a Kali shell.
I use a DigitalOcean droplet (BLR1) as a public filehost, found at cdn.icyphox.sh. The UI is the wonderful serve, by ZEIT. The same box also serves as my IRC bouncer and OpenVPN (TCP), which I tunnel via SSH running on 443. Campus firewall woes.
I plan on converting my desktop back at home into a homeserver setup. pSoon™.
Questions or comments? Send an email.