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Vouching syncthing. Easily synced 2TB files between three computers.
Vouching syncthing. Easily synced 2TB files between three computers.
The maintenance part crushed me. Most of my other self hosted home setup, I fiddle with at most 2-3 times a year. Next cloud, I logging in at least once a month because something wasn’t working.
Thanks for sharing that. My job set up NextCloud for cloud sharing and I thought it was pretty cool. Tried to set it up at home for sharing on a home network with my family and felt really confused. Every week there was a new problem that I had to solve and ended up going back just network drives and sharing.
I know I’m preaching to the choir but for the people interviewing for their first software gig
First software gig? In this market, take whatever to get experience imo.
But that second/third/etc job? Culture, then salary, then everything else. Last interview I went to bragged about giving everyone brand new sneakers yet pay $25k less than average.
The difference between experienced devs and non experienced devs is that we have hundreds of stories like that under our belt. Hundreds of “Ah I wasted all this time because of a typo”, and now we know to check for it.
It never stops. And after a while, a dev will share this exact scenario and you’ll look back and share the same bit to them.
Lol brb gonna share this with the CFO and watch them go into a panic. Going to bet they’ll freak out and by the end of 2024, no more Java for us.
This is the golden ticket I’ve been waiting for.
I installed ElementaryOS for my parents because it looked slick and gorgeous.
I actually have a lot of high praise for that product. But maybe it’s a bit too slick, like there’s an expectation of things “just working”.
When an error hits, I was on the phone or a zoom call immediately. It felt like windows again.
I went with eleventy and pure markdown files and I never looked back.
I say this as a person who loves WordPress and contributes to the open-source project.
In the article, it points out where they are finding their discoveries.
For example, one was about Data aging and impressions.
https://hexdocs.pm/google_api_content_warehouse/0.3.0/api-reference.html#attributes
It’s a LOT of api docs.
How are you bad?
You got a green verification checkmark on the same day! That’s a win!
Linux is roughly at 3.88% market share. You don’t think we can bump Linux adoption to 99.9% in the next six months?
We just have to keep writing these “Year of the Linux” posts every year.
NGL I apply to places where I use the software. But it’s not one thing, it’s a dozen things I would fix.
I actually never successfully got the job. Probably because during the interview, I come off like a rambling psychopath pointing out extremely specific things.
GPU, render my 4.2 MB json file!
If a dev only designs a solution that fits for exactly the current situation but doesn’t allow any changes, it’s not a good dev.
I don’t think anybody is arguing this. Nobody (in my decade-plus in this industry) actively codes in a way to not allow any changes.
PHP does that. I think a few others too.
Or maybe it was my IDE. I don’t remember. Not a issue I deal with frequently.
I always lump microservices architecture as premature optimization, one that should be used when you’re maxed out of resources or everything is too spaghetti.
I love the idea. And I even pitched it for a specific project. But I had to eat humble pie when the devops nerds threw more servers at the problem and it worked better than I expected.
Because some marketing asshole told them that they better be prepared to scale to a bazillion users.
I memorized all 151 pokemon before the second generation came out.
I also write Jira tickets.
Someone post this to the Best of Lemmy community. This is gold.