Not a physical object, but the Cloud9 IDE (now absorbed into Amazon’s AWS suite) for programming work. If your work fits into a terminal plus text editor (which it probably does), then making the actual hardware be a cloud server instead of a laptop that can run out of charge is a big win, and being able to access your “real” machine from different interface machines is sometimes useful.
For the interface laptop itself, I’ve been very, very happy with a Google Pixelbook (which I got after many, many satisfied years with the original Chromebook Pixel), but that depends on whether you have tasks outside the browser, terminal, or text editor.
Not a physical object, but the Cloud9 IDE (now absorbed into Amazon’s AWS suite) for programming work. If your work fits into a terminal plus text editor (which it probably does), then making the actual hardware be a cloud server instead of a laptop that can run out of charge is a big win, and being able to access your “real” machine from different interface machines is sometimes useful.
For the interface laptop itself, I’ve been very, very happy with a Google Pixelbook (which I got after many, many satisfied years with the original Chromebook Pixel), but that depends on whether you have tasks outside the browser, terminal, or text editor.