Greetings. I’m not sure if should ask this here or on a MacOS specific community, mods feel free to remove this post if necessary.

Basically I’m getting a new SRE job. At my current (future ex) SRE job, i had all the freedom to have a Archlinux KDE workstation, that is incredibly comfortable to use as i’m also dailying it on my personal workstation.

However this new company gave me the workstation choice between either a Windows machine without WSL (yes i know), either a Macbook m4. (Edit for clarity : i cannot change the OS because of central management software)

I chose the macbook for the battery life and being able to keep it at least Unix (with zsh always on hand), but i have no prior experience on using mac os.

What are the various software that you would recommend to a KDE user to have on its mac ? I know only about brew.sh the new apple container thingy, and some various fan control app. Is there a way to have Dophin as file manager, or something similar ? (IE a file manager with an integrated folder-following terminal ? General tips and tricks you may want to share?

Thank you for your attention and have a great day

  • SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    Absolutely get the Brew and Port package managers. You are gonna feel much better and at home with them. Check company policies for third party software.

  • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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    5 hours ago

    Watch the intro video when you first turn on the mac book. REALLY.

    If you miss it, or whatever, find the current vid to watch. Before I did that, it felt like the touchpad was insane, and just doing random shit.

    And get iTerm2. Its better than stock.

    From there, its just a UNIX with a funny window manager.

  • anamethatisnt@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    Someone has made an MIT licensed open source file manager for MacOS, not that I’ve used it myself:
    https://github.com/abdullahguch/folderium

    I think that a good way to approach the OS switch is to focus on “what tools does this OS have and how do they work?” and figure out a new workflow from that instead of trying to bring your old workflow over.

  • dukatos@lemmy.zip
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    5 hours ago

    I guess you’ll not be able to install whatever you want because company policy. I suggest you to learn what you may and must not do with the workstation first. For the most of the software you’ll need an admin access to allow a special permission.

  • albsen@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago
    1. VM, 2) docker (macos runs docker inside a VM, u run KDE inside of it as a fat container), 3) MacOS specific tooling - this will depend on what they let you install. homebrew is a start, nix env also exists.
  • twinnie@feddit.uk
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    5 hours ago

    Honestly, you might have been better choosing Windows. I use all three for work and MacOS is more like an iPad nowadays.

    • Pokexpert30 🌓@jlai.luOP
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      5 hours ago

      Oh sorry, i have been unclear, but i cannot change the OS, as the workstations are centrally managed. Otherwise i wouldve gone regular workstation and linux install.