Check out this fun book for history of ipa and burton. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0330511866/
Nice read. After you finish, go read this book [1] which tries to solve the 20 years to publication mystery. [1]: https://www.amazon.com/Darwin-Conspiracy-John-Darnton/dp/140...
It rusts just like iron, but the rust (AlOx, or alumina) stays bonded to the metal and actually protects it.
You can link the commit with the ticket by including its hash in the commit message, and then mark the ticket as fixed. See here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5761669/how-to-fix-a-tic...
Yeah, museum sounds like dead and rot… However on my small site [1] that’s the name of the fossil repos page [1]: https://hdrz.cc/museum
You should continue with a name which is related to fossils, fossillab.io, boneyard.dev and so on…
The Lagrange polynomials form the normal basis of most Finite Elements Method (FEM) software. There are other polynomials which are used as well, but these are the workhorse of most solvers.
I actually use fossil all the time for my projects. It just makes more sense to me in the way it works and the ease of use. And you can self host your repos with ease, for example [1] [1]:…
I guess you are not the only one. Here is talk by Andrew Godwin about using aviation practices for software engineering: https://youtu.be/d0eo3FxKQNc
Thanks for the fun and clever guides!
Congratulations! But I can’t find the source link, nor the license …
I agree. Here is my little site, which I try to keep minimal, fun and fast: https://hdrz.cc
OK I watched the whole thing. Highly recommended! It is about the rivalry between Sinclair and acorn, where the head of acorn once worked for Clive sinclair. It is about the time before ARM. Reminds me of the past, as…
Just watched the first minutes of the film. Looks like it’s about Sinclair, which is of-course pretty good as well. When I have time will watch the whole thing, maybe ARM will come up as well.
Try doublecmd[1], much better then tc, open source, updated frequently, works on all platforms. Oh and written in object pascal, which I like a lot! [1]: https://doublecmd.sourceforge.io
Oh man. 9 years… just pick something, one thing. Just one new (or old) technology that interests you, and code something with it. That’s all. After that, code the next thing. That’s all it takes. For reference, I still…
But you can. There are bearblog lookalike SSG themes. For example: https://janraasch.github.io/hugo-bearblog/
The first commenter on the article page states that his favorite is pdp-11 assembly. In the 90s at uni I learned to write assembly on pdp-11 emulator running on a pc. It truly was a nice experience.
Sure there is: https://xdrip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ This is for android, there other projects based on this code for iOS as well.
C with dynamic arrays and classes? Object pascal says hello…
This. Just use the most immediate thing available. For me its: * Apple Notes * Apple Reminders That’s it. Gets the job done.
Check out this fun book for history of ipa and burton. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0330511866/
Nice read. After you finish, go read this book [1] which tries to solve the 20 years to publication mystery. [1]: https://www.amazon.com/Darwin-Conspiracy-John-Darnton/dp/140...
It rusts just like iron, but the rust (AlOx, or alumina) stays bonded to the metal and actually protects it.
You can link the commit with the ticket by including its hash in the commit message, and then mark the ticket as fixed. See here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5761669/how-to-fix-a-tic...
Yeah, museum sounds like dead and rot… However on my small site [1] that’s the name of the fossil repos page [1]: https://hdrz.cc/museum
You should continue with a name which is related to fossils, fossillab.io, boneyard.dev and so on…
The Lagrange polynomials form the normal basis of most Finite Elements Method (FEM) software. There are other polynomials which are used as well, but these are the workhorse of most solvers.
I actually use fossil all the time for my projects. It just makes more sense to me in the way it works and the ease of use. And you can self host your repos with ease, for example [1] [1]:…
I guess you are not the only one. Here is talk by Andrew Godwin about using aviation practices for software engineering: https://youtu.be/d0eo3FxKQNc
Thanks for the fun and clever guides!
Congratulations! But I can’t find the source link, nor the license …
I agree. Here is my little site, which I try to keep minimal, fun and fast: https://hdrz.cc
OK I watched the whole thing. Highly recommended! It is about the rivalry between Sinclair and acorn, where the head of acorn once worked for Clive sinclair. It is about the time before ARM. Reminds me of the past, as…
Just watched the first minutes of the film. Looks like it’s about Sinclair, which is of-course pretty good as well. When I have time will watch the whole thing, maybe ARM will come up as well.
Try doublecmd[1], much better then tc, open source, updated frequently, works on all platforms. Oh and written in object pascal, which I like a lot! [1]: https://doublecmd.sourceforge.io
Oh man. 9 years… just pick something, one thing. Just one new (or old) technology that interests you, and code something with it. That’s all. After that, code the next thing. That’s all it takes. For reference, I still…
But you can. There are bearblog lookalike SSG themes. For example: https://janraasch.github.io/hugo-bearblog/
The first commenter on the article page states that his favorite is pdp-11 assembly. In the 90s at uni I learned to write assembly on pdp-11 emulator running on a pc. It truly was a nice experience.
Sure there is: https://xdrip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ This is for android, there other projects based on this code for iOS as well.
C with dynamic arrays and classes? Object pascal says hello…
This. Just use the most immediate thing available. For me its: * Apple Notes * Apple Reminders That’s it. Gets the job done.