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jlundberg

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It is an amazing time for programmers

46elks.com
137 points·by jlundberg·지난달·115 comments

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jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
My two best points of advice is:

Go to meetups/hackathons

Threads the app, reply to coders on posts you find interesting and have things to add to.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Relevant critique of this article. I should probably have elaborated more on WHY one should dare to do that and HOW you can that in a respectful and mutual way.

How to increase the signal and not the noise.

Sending an email without any clear purpose is not something I would encourge. But a highly thoughtful email about some of their works or question you have about a recent piece of code is probably appreciated. Genuine conversation.

The easiest way to start your journey towards overcoming the imposter syndrome while not burdening someone is to reply to a recent tweet.

If you have something relevant to say that is. But you probably do: more often than not.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
I would certainly read that reply or even better the book!

That’s actually what I asked Mike Pall to do regarding JIT. He was reluctany and probably thinks too little of his teaching ability.. but that book would be awesome for future generations of compiler folks to read!

Back to Bellard, maybe a good first approach is to ping one of his co-authors like the person he made QuickJS with.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Would probably sth memoreable and positive for him :)

I doubt he’ll get more than a handful.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Very much this. Especially Daniel Stenberg or for Sweden more locally famous coders like Christian Landgren are very approachable on LinkedIn.

Makes for an intresting conversation and you can learn a lot by posting a well thought comment :)
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Yeah, GitHub stars is becoming a vanity metric and not indication of quality.

I have been contemplating a rating system for open source software with a mandatory tag for each star. Allows you to filter out perspectives you don’t care about.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Author here.

Actually wrote the draft on this in January but last week finally got enough time to complete this with proper project links etc.

We are certainly real people, except for one of the faces on our /support page who’s signature we use when replying to particularly aggressive fraudsters (to avoid feeling personally offended).

The service might look easy on the surface, but getting all required infrastructure in place here in Europe is hard and the telecom world is surprisingly complex.

”I am jealous at you guys: backend services still has a future” a coder friend told me today at lunch.

On topic, I obviously don’t think the community train has passed.

Especially on meetups I see a lot of genuine connections between programmers being made. Threads, the app, has recently been the most relevant place for me to casually chat with other programmers.

I don’t vouch for people to spam: but to overcome their imposter syndrome and dare to talk about coding with fellow programmers. Even the legends.

And they often invite for conversations: wether it’s a comment field, pull request or tweet.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Indeed! Got any advice for people who want to go for it and write their first tweet or email?
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Yeah, it’s not about spamming people but overcoming the imposter syndrome.

Learning to find this balance of not being annoying is probably easiest by trying to make relevant comments on someones tweet. And the response back will give you an energy boost! :)

These people are much more approachable than people generally believe.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
Yep, the biggest blocker for a good conversation is people simply not writing an email or trying to make that call.

Which is why I wrote this.

Is the same at conferences: one of the best things you can do is to fo and talk to the person holding the lecture. They usually appreciate it very much.

You don’t need to be famous to do that.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
I wrote an email to Mike Pall once and got a very refreshing reply.

Daniel Stenberg is not on the list but he is also a very active programmer on social media like LinkedIn that you can interact with.
jlundberg
·지난달·discuss
It is hard today to grasp what Fidonet really was. But for me and many others it was such a life changing thing.

Do you know of any good articles, books or blog post written for outsiders to read?
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
I have an Apple aluminum keyboard in my backpack all the time.

Very nice for note taking during meetings or emailing on train trips.

Or my favorite: writing outdoors.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
The stress relief of a plain old Linux terminal should not be underestimated.

Not only for writing, but for shell sessions too.

I love my Raspberry Pi for that.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
Been following this for so many years. The previous project lead Michael Pripps (?) was really inspiring.

It is amazing the project keeps going.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
The problem with that hub is that it is not being updated.

I guess the founded had trouble coping with the big attention it got and was swamped with submissions.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
I am so happy email is not dead.

We need more playing fields and protocols new players can enter with being blocked by a gatekeeper.

One could argue Google and Microsoft are gatekeepes for email and in some sense they are. But at least it’s possible to challenge their power both technically and policy wise. Eventually it will fade.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
We see a lot of new users coming from Twilio.

For some reason the LLMs have started recommending us for people looking for a European or Swedish alternative.
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
Good catch in the noise. Thanks!
jlundberg
·2개월 전·discuss
With Chris Lattners track record, there is little reason to doubt they actually will open source this.