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He didn’t come here to fiddle.
He didn’t come here to fiddle.
Dr. Harold?
The only correct answer.
I may put this on a slide for the Code Smells part of Refactoring lecture I have coming up.
I looked at Joplin and Obsidian for the kind of notetaking I do and settled on Obsidian. To be honest, both have more features than I use. I like Obsidian because it’s based on Markdown, so you’re not tied to some oddball file format. But you should try them out and see which one fits your work style.
Picture it: A thousand years in the future, mankind is exploring the stars, and somewhere in their starships lies a 555, doing 555 things.
While this is great, it only works for self-hosted blogs when your service provider allows access to the Webfinger endpoint. If not, you can try petitioning your provider to open it up but they may not want to do that. It’s really frustrating.
I didn’t take me more than a day to learn (I don’t understand) React.
You have no tasks, there’s nothing to manage. I’d say you’re done for the day.
I’ve been a Mac guy since 1985 but I’ve always had additional machines running other OSes (including Windows). My first Linux experience was with Yggdrasil, which my small company was trying out. We never got it to boot. After that, it was early Red Hat, which I ran for years until the hardware I was using died. After that, it was various versions of Ubuntu on machines at work. Now I’ve got a couple of Raspberry Pis running Raspian.
I’m on Bluesky and my view of it, at least, is absolutely nothing like Twitter. I’m glad he quit it before he could really turn it into another Nazi-infested hellhole.