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quaddo

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quaddo
·12 ay önce·discuss
I was a huge tilix fan for ages, but ran into an issue with long URLs being unclickable.
quaddo
·geçen yıl·discuss
Circa 1997 a coworker lamented that he had signed up for some email list, and attempts to unsubscribe weren’t working (more of a manual thing, IIRC). I made the suggestion to set up a cronjob to run hourly, to send an email request to be unsubscribed. It would source a text file containing the request to be unsubscribed. And with each iteration, it would duplicate the text from the file, effectively a geometric progression. The list owner responded about a week or so later, rather urgently requesting that my coworker cut it out, saying that he would remove him from the list. Apparently the list owner had been away on vacation the entire time.
quaddo
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I’m in a similar situation and hadn’t thought of it that way. My take on the email I receive is that they fall into one of these categories: a) genuinely intended for me (and not spam), b) spam, c) genuinely intended case of mistaken address (they forgot to include another character), d) someone using mine as their throwaway (site sending verification email), and e) someone using mine as their throwaway (no verification process, ergo not altogether different from spam).
quaddo
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I do something somewhat similar which has evolved for myself and in part for my team. What follows is heavily abridged in the interest of time.

I use Obsidian as follows:

1. Daily log in bullet-point format. Title in YYYY-MM-DD format. Bottom of log has [[YYYY-MM-DD]] with tomorrow’s date.

If I get into a task that starts to get a bit ‘chatty’ and/or would benefit from capturing stdin/stdout/stderr snippets, I’ll use the [[blah]] trick and dump it there.

If a particular priority task didn’t get tended to, I copy that into tomorrow’s daily before stepping afk for the day.

Gets shared with manager, etc.

2. Weekly summary using the ![[Week ending YYYY-MM-DD]] embedded view Obsidian feature in my daily log page. For that at-a-glance warm fuzzies. This boils down to:

- retrospective - highs - lows - 1:1 notes - incoming week’s tasks/priorities

I use this page for my 1:1’s of course. I’ve only very recently started copying the retrospective to my manager via Slack to ensure he’s got the goods.

I prep my incoming week with a new weekly summary, and pre-populate the bare bones for the daily notes.