It’s definitely not perfect, but I’ve been running Gnome Wayland on my Nvidia card for close to 6 months, and haven’t had too many problems.
Assistant to the Vice Rep of the World
It’s definitely not perfect, but I’ve been running Gnome Wayland on my Nvidia card for close to 6 months, and haven’t had too many problems.
I’m sure a lot of it comes down to different experiences and generally different points of view, but I’ve found myself disagreeing with pretty much every article from this site I’ve seen so far.
I don’t know about this specific program, but pretty much every other time I’ve seen something like this it’s been treated as another language and is a way for developers to test that that feature actually works.
Honestly, I don’t think more of the same is going to help you feel less burned out. Obviously your couple of sentences doesn’t give me a lot of insight into your life, but you do not seem to enjoy your job, and that is going to color your whole perception on anything related to it. I think I’d honestly recommend you start looking for work you actually enjoy, but if that isn’t possible I recommend unplugging as much as possible for awhile. That’s the only way I’ve ever had the spark come back for me. Starting side projects always lose their luster after a session or two and just started to feel like another source of stress for me.
I haven’t verified that everything is totally there, but Proton has all their stuff here: https://github.com/ProtonMail
Having worked in the financial industry, this sounds uncomfortably close to the truth.
It’s not as “glamorous” as coding often is seen as, but what almost every open source project needs is better documentation. It’s also something that can help you be productive as you’re learning a codebase.
I have met a lot of people that don’t interact with most of the outside code world for various reasons. Mostly it’s draconian rules (sometimes company mandated, sometimes regulatory), but sometimes what they’ve been working on is just so niche that there really aren’t anything out there for them to interact with.
Wasn’t Go designed to be a memory safe systems programming language? I haven’t really used it enough to see if it holds true, though.