Damn right he owes us!! /s
How is being python-based a good thing?
Ja, also dass die Überschrift mist ist da sind wir uns einig. Mein Punkt war eher, dass ich glaube, dass es nicht die Intention der Autoren war die Strafe als überzogen oder ungerecht darzustellen und dass die Überschrift eben nur so ist wie sie ist damit Leute auf den Artikel klicken.
Seems like a year ago he was actually using Linux himself. Wondering what happened that made him feel so butthurt.
Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yaos. I was expecting a nice fantasy story with dragons and shit. But the romance part of it was just so annoying. "Oh look that dude is so hot..." at every. single. occasion. I could've known beforehand that this book is more targeted towards female readers, but sometimes I just like to go to the book store and buy a book based on the blurb. Since then I made the new rule to keep my distance to books that mention TikTok or #BookTok on the cover.
Surprised to see jellyfin here tbh. The docker image needed literally zero configuration to work perfectly for me.
I should print this out. I really think this may be a big part of the problem.
Sub-brain will obey forebrain, I am not offering any choices or debate on the issue. We are standing up now and the feet are walking, the decision is final, now stfu.
I like that. Never really thought of it as a willpower thing. But yeah I think you are right.
I think you are making a good point. For private projects I do in fact programme a lot in go. Sometimes I even pull the plug on my router and use just devdocs.io to get things done. And this does make things at least a lot more bearable. Before I started the post graduate programme I'm currently in I did full stack development for a living in different projects. Usually Spring Boot + either vue, react or angular for frontend. And I 100% agree with you: Spring Boot is just madness. My personal arch enemy is Hibernate though. It's awesome when it works, but at some point it won't and then it is absolute hell. Problem is that where I live go jobs are scarce. Virtually everyone here is doing Spring Boot.
I think sometimes I do enjoy bug hunting as well, but only if I didn't write the bug myself and only if there is no research outside the editor involved. Fixing my own bugs feels like "not progressing" to me. So tell us your secret.
A friend of mine has had a Tuxedo laptop for about 6 years now. Afaik she is rather happy with it, but personally I don't like it. The fan is extremely loud, the build quality feels rather flimsy and a small 1 foot drop broke the plastic covers at the hinges. But then again, this device is like 6 years old, maybe they are better now.
I used to do this, but imho the used language is hardly a useful index. When does it happen that you want to see everything written python? For me that's never.
Also where do you put multi-language projects? Like, go backend with typescript frontend or whatever.