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abzug

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Inappbrowser.com

inappbrowser.com
2 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

Wolfram Institute

wolframinstitute.org
3 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

The Construction and Principal Uses of Mathematical Instruments

c82.net
1 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

Making of 17th Century Watercolors

c82.net
1 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

Inform 7 is now open source

github.com
70 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·1 comments

A.I. Is Mastering Language. Should We Trust What It Says?

nytimes.com
3 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

In defense of simple architectures

danluu.com
368 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·189 comments

What’s new in Emacs 28.1?

masteringemacs.org
378 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·284 comments

Plain Text Sports

plaintextsports.com
309 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·109 comments

His software sang the words of God. Then it went silent

inputmag.com
4 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·1 comments

The Problem with Tutorials

code.visualstudio.com
9 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

My rapid descent into the world of DIY trackballs

theverge.com
3 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

There’s no need to change passwords if they're robust, unique and not breached

tidbits.com
359 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·272 comments

Charles Dickens's code cracked by amateur sleuths

bbc.com
2 points·by abzug·4 anni fa·0 comments

comments

abzug
·4 anni fa·discuss
My hunch is consult-ripgrep or counsel-rg.
abzug
·4 anni fa·discuss
Loved the little spectrogram at the bottom. Such a nice touch.
abzug
·4 anni fa·discuss
https://twitter.com/bbedit/status/1513874673913716736
abzug
·4 anni fa·discuss
You can also have WebKit embedded in Emacs.
abzug
·4 anni fa·discuss
Honest question from someone who never used any product from JetBrains: what those IDEs gives you in order to learn/debug a new codebase in such easy way?
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for the kind words, a lot resonated with me.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Attorney but I read a ton of programming-related stuff, know how to use the command-line and used Emacs for a bunch of stuff. It's my shell, rolodex, text editor, calendar, file manager and, being Emacs there's a lot of little functions and stuff that I've built for myself and/or to make things easy.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thanks, I have plans to exercise coming 2022.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thank you so much for this. I'm already doing some (2, 4, 5) others are planned for 2022 (1, 3, 6). But 7 is brutal. I was going to propose but things changed.

Anyway, again: thank you very much. This is very appreciated. Very kind of you.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
No need to apologize.

Thanks for the help and kind words.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thanks, I'm 36 by the way.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
I just want to do something to move on.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
From what I gathered, it's a book geared towards programmers new to C++.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
If you're nobody, you can be anything you want to.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Not german, just love the Kraftwerk song.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thanks for the pointers.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
It's just something that I enjoy and I can finally try to be good at and who knows, get a job doing it.

I already use Emacs for everything since 2003, so...
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Doesn't linear algebra requires a lot of background/intuition? I have none.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Thanks.
abzug
·5 anni fa·discuss
Since I'm focusing on the job market, I'm collecting resources to learn C++. From what I gathered the best beginner book is Bjarne Stroustrup's Programming: Principles and Practice Using C++, which I think it'll be good since it's a programming book that uses C++ and not a book solely about C++.

But I'm open to any advice.