Dude, I was trying to remember the name of "The Quiet Year" for a while now! Thank you!
Yeah, I looked through the GitHub. I've used Clojure before so it seems pretty easy to pick up.
I get tags and atoms. It seems like the problem with class serialization is somewhat arbitrary though. It seems like both sides need the object schema ahead of time, in which case the schema can flag how it sdould be…
Curious: what are the primary advantages you see?
You know, I do keep getting random checks in the mail...
I don't think anyone is saying cooldowns are the only thing you need - just that it's a 30sec change that should harden your code. Also, most malicious versions seem to be detected by tools scanning new packages. People…
I don't do it all the time, usually just when I feel swamped with a bunch of different tasks. I also try to time box it, so no matter what I roll I work on it for a predictable length of time. I think the most effective…
What advantages does this provide over existing solutions (Coder, DevEnv, DevPod)? Also, can you provide a non curl based install?
I legit do something similar to this for my ADHD. I make 6,8, or 10 item long lists of tasks, then roll a die to choose what to do. I pair it with a similar list of rewards that I can roll on when I complete a task.
Dude, I was trying to remember the name of "The Quiet Year" for a while now! Thank you!
Yeah, I looked through the GitHub. I've used Clojure before so it seems pretty easy to pick up.
I get tags and atoms. It seems like the problem with class serialization is somewhat arbitrary though. It seems like both sides need the object schema ahead of time, in which case the schema can flag how it sdould be…
Curious: what are the primary advantages you see?
You know, I do keep getting random checks in the mail...
I don't think anyone is saying cooldowns are the only thing you need - just that it's a 30sec change that should harden your code. Also, most malicious versions seem to be detected by tools scanning new packages. People…
I don't do it all the time, usually just when I feel swamped with a bunch of different tasks. I also try to time box it, so no matter what I roll I work on it for a predictable length of time. I think the most effective…
What advantages does this provide over existing solutions (Coder, DevEnv, DevPod)? Also, can you provide a non curl based install?
I legit do something similar to this for my ADHD. I make 6,8, or 10 item long lists of tasks, then roll a die to choose what to do. I pair it with a similar list of rewards that I can roll on when I complete a task.