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dherikb

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dherikb
·15 giorni fa·discuss
I've never been a fan of coffee, but I liked drinking it, but more out of habit than desire, and always at work (rarely at home). Years ago I started to notice terrible headaches on the weekends, and only after a long time did I manage to understand that coffee withdrawal was the cause. For me the conclusion was obvious: I will no longer take something that affects my body at this level. I have the same problem with Coke/Pepsi, I stopped taking it too.

Fun fact: on the same day I noticed and stopped taking it coffee, 5 days later I had terrible muscle pain in my lower back (I could hardly sleep). 2 days later I had no more pain. I researched later and saw that this type of pain could also be caused as an effect of caffeine withdrawal.
dherikb
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I mainly use Vivaldi because it has the best vertical tabs experience among the browsers.
dherikb
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I like Vlad: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vladmihalcea
dherikb
·11 mesi fa·discuss
This reminds me of something I did in one of the previous companies where I worked.

Like anyone else, when I joined the company, I had various questions: how to access certain systems, how to handle permissions, how to debug specific services, etc.

I compiled all these questions and answers as notes in a Git repository that my teammates could access. I wrote the notes using QOwnNotes, utilizing its Git integration. So, when someone had a question for which I already had the answer, I could simply share my notes, or create/update a node and share it.

The names of the notes were straightforward and easy to follow, such as:

- aws.md

- azure.md

- kubernetes.md

- staging.md

- production.md

- useful-commands.md (jq, sed, base64, etc)

My teammates used this resource frequently. As I was preparing to leave the company, I suggested them to fork my notes repository. I later heard that they continued to use it for many months afterward.
dherikb
·12 mesi fa·discuss
Very good article.

After read about the poor scenario where the Linux accessibility tools is today (https://fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-want-to-love-linux-it-d...), I was wondering: if maybe the developers start to use these accessibility tools to improve their speed reading (and productivity as well), this could also helps to prioritize the accessibility features and bug fixes in Gnome, KDE, Qt, etc.
dherikb
·12 mesi fa·discuss
Sugarcane, I believe.
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
Vertical tabs is really great.
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
I totally support that. I know that this can create bad habits, but not everyone wants to become a great piano player; some of us just want to have some fun playing.
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
Same reason. I can add to this list Readme.com and Notion.
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
I have the exactly same issue using it with Aider.
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
I know that this can sound counterintuitive, but the best strategy to keep the phone away from me is to be on my desktop computer.

Different from when I'm on my smartphone, I do not feel any anxiety to check social networks using my computer. So I can focus more on learning some stuff, coding, organizing my personal data, checking my appointments, checking the tech news, or even playing some games (to have some fun).
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
I have the same issue using it with Aider.

The model is good to solve problems, but is very difficult to control the unnecessary changes that the model does in the rest of the code. Also it adds a lot of unnecessary comments, even when I explicitly say to not add.

For now Deepseek R1 and V3 it's working better to me, producing more predictable results and capturing better my intentions (not tried Claude yet).
dherikb
·anno scorso·discuss
Well, I found these candidates long before ChatGPT