I've been learning and playing with Common Lisp. I've been involved in Java for more than a decade and wanted to try something new. I wanted to try something outside of OOP and more functional. I went from Scala -> Clojure -> Common Lisp. I've also switched to Emacs for almost all of my common tasks. That hurt as a long time Vim user :) but I'm enjoying it so far
Again, I started with solarized but moved onto other themes. I think it was one of the first themes that was implemented almost everywhere. It was nice to have my browser, IDE, window manager etc all themed up the same way.
I also appreciate the work he went into to set the color scheme up. I feel the same spirit with the Modus themes[1] for emacs
This is very useful. I'm learning clojure at the moment and it's way more helpful to have little code snippets to explain points, much like the documentation does.
I also use Pinboard and also have had no replies to emails.
I actually like the service but I don't use the archive feature. It's minimal, text based and provides rss feeds for most things. It also plays nice with Miniflux.
I'm going to look at ArchiveBox but I hope someone else takes over Pinboard and can give it some proper time and attention
I'm a Java fan at heart and I've been coding with my 6 year old on [0] Greenfoot. It required a bit of setup for him but we've had a lot of fun. He's writing code using [1]Stride which helps with code blocks
I love my X220. Also running arch with dwm. Initially, it was more for tinkering and just to play with but it's getting more day to day use. The keyboard is great and I'm not as worried if it drops or the kids get their hands on it. I also love the light placement rather than the keyboard being back-lit
Been pushing it to do Java development and, while a little slow, it's holding up fine
I have the same but it feels more like a type of paralysis rather than a loop. I'm finding the more I'm mentally trying to multi task, the worse this gets
I can only do one task deeply at a time but while doing that, I will think and worry about other tasks that need to be done. This stops me from what I am working on, leaving it half way and starting something else. When I reach a point when two or more tasks compete for my attention (or someone drops something on my plate) I feel locked up.
The best thing I've found is to capture tasks as soon as I get them and try to ignore things until my current task is done. Otherwise, i drift of into mindless scrolling
I've used lots of 'note' apps but ended up with 2 parts that work for me
1. A physical notebook for quick capture
2. A single markdown document which I search through or edit with Vim
I have simple vim macro that prints today's date bound to a key. This makes it easy to write notes for that day. It's worked well for the last few years
Do you ever cache content offline to read later? This is my current dilemma. On on hand, you have a nice readability plugin and offline content but the plugin may not read everything well or a bookmark which gives the right page with all the content but not offline
I've played far too much Startcraft: BW and 2 as Zerg but not any more. It's not just the development of a strategy but also being able to execute it under duress.
You also end up watching the pros and seeing the strategies they develop. If you find it difficult, the single player, and group modes (2vs2, 3vs3 etc) are an easier way into laddering
I play a lot of EVE Online these days. I do solo and small gang in frigates and there is some strategy in building a ship fitting and engaging and enemy but not in the same way as an RTS. I just prefer the slower pace compared to Starcraft
I think their environment has a part to play in it
My 6 year old had been using scratch at school but seeing me using Arch and programming in Java made him want to use the terminal and write words to code. He said that scratch was a "toy" and he wanted to do "real" computer work
I've been learning and playing with Common Lisp. I've been involved in Java for more than a decade and wanted to try something new. I wanted to try something outside of OOP and more functional. I went from Scala -> Clojure -> Common Lisp. I've also switched to Emacs for almost all of my common tasks. That hurt as a long time Vim user :) but I'm enjoying it so far