Not a blog, but a way of discovering new blogs. I subscribe to the unofficial best hacker news submissions RSS feed.
I found the blog on an IT guy that works in a research station in Antarctica.
Other places where you can find me
Not a blog, but a way of discovering new blogs. I subscribe to the unofficial best hacker news submissions RSS feed.
I found the blog on an IT guy that works in a research station in Antarctica.
Not an app, but for the ones interested in following specific hacker news posts, there’s the unofficial Hacker News RSS feeds.
On the design side:
I like that profiles do not show the total karma count. I feel like that just incentivises mindless posting just to get that counter up (some people love seeing their numbers going up).
I don’t think the “hot” sorting algorithm is very good yet. A lot of old posts were showing up (haven’t seen those lately, maybe it has been fixed), but the algorithm is still not great.
Would be nice to auto hide posts that I already upvoted or downvoted. That option exists on Reddit
You’re welcome!
Had no idea that thunderbird didn’t do it, sounds like a pretty basic feature to me.
I’m not sure I understand… I thought all readers did this.
Doesn’t liferea do it? (It’s also gtk iirc)
Same.
I actually feel that my stubbornness has made my life better in this case.
I’ve been to Reddit since, but I no longer feel the need to scroll it. I just use it when I went to find a genuine human recommendation on a topic.
You can still use programming to leverage your current position.
If you work admin in an office and are able to automate a bunch of workflows with some simple scripts, you’ll have more leverage when salary raises start to get discussed.
Will your code be at the level a professional programmer would produce? Probably not, but you’re not competing with one.
Because I refuse to install the Reddit official app.
Mainly not giving out information about me on all these threads that keep cropping up asking age and where you are from.
I drive whichever vehicle doesn’t get my data harvested.
ls / cd for basic stuff
fzf if I want to find my way through the history
broot if I want to search for a file
ripgrep if I want to find a file with specific contents.
I know that the last 3 are not available by default, but they are good pieces of software, so I’m just going to install them.
Basically, an RSS feed is a link that gets updated when there’s an update to a website (here’s an example from my medium page). Anytime I post something, it gets updated.
An RSS feed reader is an app that you can use to list out which websites you’re interested in, and pulls up any new articles that get published.
RSS feeds are everywhere, but often hidden beneath the surface. For example, in the youtube page for Reuters you can’t see any link to an RSS feed, but if you right-click and press “inspect page source”, and then Ctrl+f for the word “rss”, you can find the link hidden there: https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UChqUTb7kYRX8-EiaN3XFrSQ
Most RSS feed readers would be able to find that hidden link for you (you’d just have to give it the normal youtube page link). This is how I “subscribe” to things, I just have one central app where I get updates on everything I’m interested in following (blogs, news, videos, etc).
If a youtuber has both an Odyssey and a Youtube channel with the same content, I subscribe to the RSS feed from Odyssey.
If a youtuber I’m interested in mirrors their videos somewhere else, I’ll subscribe to that source via RSS. But that’s just to divert traffic from YouTube, not because I have a preference either way regarding community interactions (I never read comments on videos).
This is not inside any application, just a simple bashrc alias if I want to connect to a database to do some quick checks on my terminal.
I have proper secrets managers when dealing with credentials inside code.
True, but I can only pick 3, and Berkshire Hathaway is the top one on the s&p500 that it’s not tech.
If I was going for money and influence across different areas, maybe Google, Amazon, and Berkshire Hathaway.
When dealing with PostgreSQL databases, I use pass
as a replacement for ~/.pgpass
.
Like this:
alias my_db='PGPASSWORD=$(pass databases/my_db) psql -h (...)'
This means I don’t have to store database passwords in plaintext inside the ~/.pgpass
file.
I see you like playing life on hard mode.
I’m still not sure what I’ll do next, I just know I don’t like the saga so far
Someone should keep an eye on Linus.