An open-source Resilio Sync alternative (not syncthing) that centers around the folder represented by unique hash, without any device management
An open-source Resilio Sync alternative (not syncthing) that centers around the folder represented by unique hash, without any device management
There was a time when my cat owned three cardboard boxes, and whenever I wanted to take the old cardboard boxes that he had bitten through, he would chase me and meow in opposition.
Tails. It may not be designed for LTS, but it appears to be stable and secure.
hello world:
fn main() {
areas := ['game', 'web', 'tools', 'science', 'systems',
'embedded', 'drivers', 'GUI', 'mobile']
for area in areas {
println('Hello, ${area} developers!')
}
}
http + time:
import time
import net.http
resp := http.get('https://vlang.io/utc_now') or {
println('failed to fetch data from the server')
return
}
t := time.unix(resp.body.int())
println(t.format()) // 2019-08-16 17:48
She was going to be silenced, because if she lived, more people would be exposed
When I write code in the terminal, the editor I use the most is nano
. I know vim and emacs are more powerful, but I don’t really feel that nano is incompetent. I run nano in byobu
productivity is relative and requires a reference coordinate system. The best way to become a 10x engineer is to PK with a turtle team, but of course what the value is is another matter.
Also, your productivity may not be significantly improved in certain environments. When every member of the team reaches the speed of light, you will find yourself impossible to be faster anyway. Setting a goal beyond the speed of light is contrary to science.
yes, VLC for gui, cmus for cli.
Python is suitable for beginner and is also easy to write code in different fields. I’m a developer, half of my time is writing code to get things done, and the other half is learning more development techniques, which I’ve been learning for over twenty years.