Just use Btop is the way! Htop is for people who end their stories with "I use ark btw". Also, you present like steve jobs when he got pissed off by the Chinese kids not producing his Iphones quick enough. TL:DR you got a new sub, I love it!
Don't take this comment too seriously, we all have our preferences for a multitude of reasons! Watched just to see if there was something I was missing with htop over btop/bpytop and nope, not going back. I get it, less is more, but at a glance I know waaay more about what is going on in my system with btop vs htop. btop makes really good use of screen space. If I could pick a single feature that I refuse to live without, it is disk I/O activity, purely based on the fact that it is usually the reason why I need to look at a process monitor to begin with, my CPU and memory are rarely the culprit when I question system performance (unless something is single-threaded). htop has I/O, but looks like you have to navigate to a separate tab? Also having a histogram is really important, live stats don't describe the whole picture unless you stare at them. I am also confused on the last part, these process monitors have kill built into them, why manually issue kill commands? IMHO going to btop from htop feels the same as going to htop from top.
I think this setup is designed for a different purpose. The idea here is you can pop it up and see at a glance general info about your system, stuff you might normally see with a widget or system tray. It's also very compact, which is nice.
my favourite channel for when i want some linux content but also want to feel like i'm in a hostage situation
Stockholm syndrome? ;)
Cappsy. You never really apprciated the way tasks ran on your pc. In front of you is a terminal client. If you kill the wrong task.. well..
Just use Btop is the way!
Htop is for people who end their stories with "I use ark btw".
Also, you present like steve jobs when he got pissed off by the Chinese kids not producing his Iphones quick enough.
TL:DR you got a new sub, I love it!
Steve Jobs got resurrected as a Linux free-software advocate! ;)
this has to be the most british video ever
htop required to set to 'broken grey' colors lol
Don't take this comment too seriously, we all have our preferences for a multitude of reasons!
Watched just to see if there was something I was missing with htop over btop/bpytop and nope, not going back. I get it, less is more, but at a glance I know waaay more about what is going on in my system with btop vs htop. btop makes really good use of screen space. If I could pick a single feature that I refuse to live without, it is disk I/O activity, purely based on the fact that it is usually the reason why I need to look at a process monitor to begin with, my CPU and memory are rarely the culprit when I question system performance (unless something is single-threaded). htop has I/O, but looks like you have to navigate to a separate tab? Also having a histogram is really important, live stats don't describe the whole picture unless you stare at them. I am also confused on the last part, these process monitors have kill built into them, why manually issue kill commands? IMHO going to btop from htop feels the same as going to htop from top.
I think this setup is designed for a different purpose. The idea here is you can pop it up and see at a glance general info about your system, stuff you might normally see with a widget or system tray. It's also very compact, which is nice.
bpytop…