I’m actually impressed by the handwritten blog - really cool concept. Was it exported by writing on remarkable? How did he include link into the text that he wrote?
Sadly, I have the same experience. It's one of the minus points of using Thunderbird, alongside the lack of the feature for shipping my configurations (e.g. filters) across machines.
He also captured so true the process and meaning behind training to get stronger. Respect.
True, now it's blocking some VPN IPs, which is annoying.
Agree. Writing communication is essential, and might have more influence than speaking communication, in a remote working environment. The whole OSS movement has been built on this.
> Is there anybody who can share their experiences with issues and workarounds in this area? Just use your Bash/zsh to run Bash/zsh scripts: `bash script.sh`. > turned off by it not being POSIX-compliant. I was like…
From my experience, programming and technology communities are already really strong on Lemmy. I'm confident to say that if you care about these topics, moving from Reddit to Lemmy is a good option. For another…
I used to love Tuta for the tempting price (1eur/month). But now due to the increasing price, poor UX, no bridge to Thunderbird, broken filter rules, I switched to another provider.
I think the only option to make sure it will run in the 10 years is to package the linking libraries and all the dependencies. Container (e.g. Docker) or Nix can solve this, provided that these technology still live in…
> You can configure about anything (which may be a good thing) but all of this "configuration" looks and feels like Apollo 11 Command Module. I wish I could configure KDE "declaratively" with a configuration file, like…
> The way most people talk about software engineering, you'd think they were some kind of open-source warrior building entire applications from scratch when really they're on the Cancel Prime Membership Button…
> I would encourage anybody interested in a professional career (in anything) to zoom out and keep in mind that almost every profession is ultimately about providing service. > You will primarily work with (and for)…
> This is why I go out of my way to praise good work loudly and publicly when I see it. This sounds true. Some people do the boring job of cleaning code and keeping the system reliable never got a praise. But some…
But still, we should strive for writing the best "clean code" that we set out to write. So "clean code" here is subjective and bound to the individual. Normally, business and absurd deadlines force us to lessen that…
For me, the "Inbox rules" hasn't been working as I expected—some emails doen't end up in the folder that I want. The experience of editing rules feels awkward. And I cannot "bridge" Thunderbird to Tutanota to apply my…
Observability! Grafana, Prometheus, Loki, OpenTelemetry, you name it. I'm digging deeper into the architecture of those open source tools—how they work under-the-hood—and not only at the superficial surface (deploying…
I'm also trying to find some free time to contribute to some open source projects. It's not hassling but I just want to give back to the community—who gave me the career and many awesome tools already. Getting into…
Factorio is fun but the way I play it was unhealthy—several hours of Factorio after 7 hours of sitting in front of a computer. I had to give it up to find a healthier lifestyle—e.g. running, hiking, or taking a walk in…
Ansible makes mutable changes to the OS, task by task. Nix is immutable. A new change is made entirely new, and only after the build is successful, all packages are "symlinked" to the current system. Fedora Silverblue…
If only they had configuration files...
Some more features that I like: + Bottom posting can be set as default. + Selected text are automatically quoted when hitting reply. + Many add-ons and utilities are available: DKIM verifier, Mail Hop viewer, Mail Agent…
I met this problems twice, when registering and resetting my password. Reloading the page (resending the request) solved the problems.
The enterprise versions of their products are ridiculously expensive. They're always trying their best to charge you with mistakes (e.g. number of connecting clients). The pricing on the landing page is just a fraction…
I also had a hard time choosing between Python and Ruby for my goto scripting language. But given Python community is more active outside of webdev, I also chose to stick to be more professional on Python.
For the case of Javascript, (I think) it followed "Worse is better" principle. It's been trying to be as practical as possible. And it's everywhere even though it was not really great (until new standards and Typescript…
I’m actually impressed by the handwritten blog - really cool concept. Was it exported by writing on remarkable? How did he include link into the text that he wrote?
Sadly, I have the same experience. It's one of the minus points of using Thunderbird, alongside the lack of the feature for shipping my configurations (e.g. filters) across machines.
He also captured so true the process and meaning behind training to get stronger. Respect.
True, now it's blocking some VPN IPs, which is annoying.
Agree. Writing communication is essential, and might have more influence than speaking communication, in a remote working environment. The whole OSS movement has been built on this.
> Is there anybody who can share their experiences with issues and workarounds in this area? Just use your Bash/zsh to run Bash/zsh scripts: `bash script.sh`. > turned off by it not being POSIX-compliant. I was like…
From my experience, programming and technology communities are already really strong on Lemmy. I'm confident to say that if you care about these topics, moving from Reddit to Lemmy is a good option. For another…
I used to love Tuta for the tempting price (1eur/month). But now due to the increasing price, poor UX, no bridge to Thunderbird, broken filter rules, I switched to another provider.
I think the only option to make sure it will run in the 10 years is to package the linking libraries and all the dependencies. Container (e.g. Docker) or Nix can solve this, provided that these technology still live in…
> You can configure about anything (which may be a good thing) but all of this "configuration" looks and feels like Apollo 11 Command Module. I wish I could configure KDE "declaratively" with a configuration file, like…
> The way most people talk about software engineering, you'd think they were some kind of open-source warrior building entire applications from scratch when really they're on the Cancel Prime Membership Button…
> I would encourage anybody interested in a professional career (in anything) to zoom out and keep in mind that almost every profession is ultimately about providing service. > You will primarily work with (and for)…
> This is why I go out of my way to praise good work loudly and publicly when I see it. This sounds true. Some people do the boring job of cleaning code and keeping the system reliable never got a praise. But some…
But still, we should strive for writing the best "clean code" that we set out to write. So "clean code" here is subjective and bound to the individual. Normally, business and absurd deadlines force us to lessen that…
For me, the "Inbox rules" hasn't been working as I expected—some emails doen't end up in the folder that I want. The experience of editing rules feels awkward. And I cannot "bridge" Thunderbird to Tutanota to apply my…
Observability! Grafana, Prometheus, Loki, OpenTelemetry, you name it. I'm digging deeper into the architecture of those open source tools—how they work under-the-hood—and not only at the superficial surface (deploying…
I'm also trying to find some free time to contribute to some open source projects. It's not hassling but I just want to give back to the community—who gave me the career and many awesome tools already. Getting into…
Factorio is fun but the way I play it was unhealthy—several hours of Factorio after 7 hours of sitting in front of a computer. I had to give it up to find a healthier lifestyle—e.g. running, hiking, or taking a walk in…
Ansible makes mutable changes to the OS, task by task. Nix is immutable. A new change is made entirely new, and only after the build is successful, all packages are "symlinked" to the current system. Fedora Silverblue…
If only they had configuration files...
Some more features that I like: + Bottom posting can be set as default. + Selected text are automatically quoted when hitting reply. + Many add-ons and utilities are available: DKIM verifier, Mail Hop viewer, Mail Agent…
I met this problems twice, when registering and resetting my password. Reloading the page (resending the request) solved the problems.
The enterprise versions of their products are ridiculously expensive. They're always trying their best to charge you with mistakes (e.g. number of connecting clients). The pricing on the landing page is just a fraction…
I also had a hard time choosing between Python and Ruby for my goto scripting language. But given Python community is more active outside of webdev, I also chose to stick to be more professional on Python.
For the case of Javascript, (I think) it followed "Worse is better" principle. It's been trying to be as practical as possible. And it's everywhere even though it was not really great (until new standards and Typescript…