If you do most of your work in a terminal, this post may feel only mildly relevant. But if your day often starts in Windows Explorer, the gap between browsing files and acting on them can be surprisingly clumsy. You open a folder, inspect files, jump between project directories, right-click things, copy paths, open terminals, launch editors, and repeat the same small rituals dozens of times a day. None of these steps is difficult on its own. Together, they quietly drain momentum. That is the problem Explobar is built to solve. The Windows Explorer gap Windows Explorer is still the default file system workspace for many developers on Windows.…