I've just been getting up and running with a minimal distro lately and also discovered user-dirs.dirs
, so I'm no longer bound by the standard auto-generated Home folders.
Looking to share and learn how other comrades organise their home directories. Any tips appreciated, and also just seeing how other people like to use and organise ~/
:-)
Here's how I've organised ~/
on my new install so far:
* audio/
* audiobooks/
* music/
* podcasts/
* books/
* documents/
* dotfiles/
* downloads/
* images/
* photos/
* screenshots/
* wallpaper/
* opt/
* planner/
* projects/
* scripts/
* videos/
* workspace/
… plus all the hidden cruft that's placed in home by various programs. I do my best to enforce the XDG_CONFIG_HOME standard but I'm still in the process of moving stuff into .config/
.
Most of these are self-explanatory. opt/
is for software I build from source or otherwise not available in my package manager. planner/
is a git repo full of plain text and markdown files used to manage productivity and take notes. projects/
is my personal git repos containing stuff like my blog, creative writing etc. scripts/
is part of my $PATH and contains executable helper scripts such as setting a random wallpaper, fetching mail, etc. It's also a git repo. workspace/
is actually the XDG_DESKTOP_DIR
but renamed. My window manager doesn't put files/folders on the actual desktop so I use this space for repos I contribute to for my job as well as transient tasks which require a folder structure for getting something done but which will likely be removed later. Basically stuff that's not an actual personal "project" and I'm working on at the moment.
Things I'm thinking about:
- alternative names for
downloads/
. There are three folders which startdo
meaning tab-complete only works on the third letter. Not ideal. I've seen some people useincoming/
but I keep flip-flopping on whether I like this or not. - Possibly renaming
dotfiles/
to.dotfiles/
but then, I use it a fair amount at the moment. - adding an
articles
folder for academic articles and HTML blog posts I want to keep locally.
If you find any good literature around how Worker co-ops can fit into a broader class struggle please let me know! All of my analysis is based on first-hand experience of working in a worker co-op since 2018 and being involved with my local Communist Party since 2017, which is likely only a piece of the wider puzzle since all co-ops are different and the material conditions of each country are different as well.
I'm very keen to learn if there are explicit strategies around better utilising co-operatives in class struggle and if there are tools/techniques for avoiding the pitfalls I've described.