An 'authoritarian' company, that has to follow labor, trade, civil laws made by the actual government. That I can 'emigrate' from whenever I want without having to learn a new language...
a turns ijkl into arrow keys (like wsad, but I have a left handed mouse)
k + j = copy, k + l = paste
and so on for symbols, brackets, etc.
The goal is to move from the home row as little as possible. I attempted to gather statistics on most used keys when programming at work, which was mildly successful.
I think most containers also run "bare metal", they just are more isolated as far as process/memory/fs, etc.
Having worked with and without Docker for various web apps, it removes some dependency management and server setup at the cost of another layer (or two...) of complexity. It's not always worth it to go to containers.
Docker seems to make the most sense in cloud environments that scale horizontally.
I had forked a fork of this a while ago (unbury.us) -- I don't see any updates on the GitHub repo that links to that domain: https://github.com/duaneking/unburyme
The contact info is also quite vague now, where it previously linked to the creator's twitter and github.
Weight lifters can go beyond 50+ lbs, safely, only if the weight is basically in barbell (or dumbbell, or whatever) format. A large 100lb box isn't being lifted by any smart weightlifter alone.
I had wanted to do that, but when I created it I was using a proprietary ThinkPad dock and Windows 7, and I couldn't find an easy way to detect when connected/disconnected. Might be a way now with Win10 and Type-C docks.
> One of the things that I’d love to see in this that fancy zones is missing is the ability of windows to remember where they should be after I reconnect to my dock.
When I worked in an office, and had frequent meetings I had to take my laptop to, it irked me enough to come up with my own solution: