I use my computer for so many things and I have about 200 applications on my computer. I don’t know why, but it bothers me that everything happens on this one machine as well as seeing so many app icons (even grouped into folders). It’s not an option, but I’d prefer to have dedicated computers for broad categories of tasks (Audio DAW, video editing, bash scripting, web dev, gaming, system stuff like disk space visualisation, web apps for social media and video sites, games, communications, office, music and film.
So I was thinking of installing something like openSUSE in a VM on my iMac. But I’m not sure if it’s a good idea. Putting CPU intensive applications onto the VM is pointless since they’ll struggle more. But putting convenient apps on the VM seems like a mistake too because it means that quick utilities like calendar, voice memos, alarms, contacts etc become inconvenient.
Anyway. I miss the days when all these functions weren’t service by the same hardware and screen. Does anyone who can relate have any ideas?
One thing I’ve done is have my music served by Navidrome on a headless server.
How many of those 200 applications did you deliberately install? That seems excessive even for all of those use cases.
And can you elaborate on these use cases, like I’m not sure why you would want a specific VM for bash scripting.
macOS comes with quite a few applications that can’t be uninstalled. They’re quality applications, but many are totally irrelevant to me like Stocks, Chess, Stickies, Home Assistant, AI stuff, Graphs and others).
Let mé elaborate on use cases (and thanks for asking, by the way): Terminal / bash
Video Editing:
Audio editing / Music production:
Tech:
Literature / Study:
The rest of the apps fall into: entertainment, social media (web apps only), office / communications, system utilities (like disk space visualiser and caffeine which prevents screensaver), LLM clients like DeepSeek and ChatGPT.
Finally I have meditation apps.