I'm a "recent" grad looking to get my first full-time position. Please do not contact me if you're looking for 10+ years experience or if you want to fill a senior role.
Just to make sure I have this right, this has to do with the _amount_ of files in their repo and not the _size_ of the files? So projects like git annex and LFS would not help the speed of the git repos?
Wasn't aware of that, though the current performance of nouveau is pretty horrendous. At least for newer cards. It's a bit unfortunate but to essentially have a working card you must have the proprietary drivers installed.
I have this exact machine with an i7 and do not get anywhere as low as 2 hours. Do you have bumblebee installed? It sounds like you might have the dedicated graphics runnign at all times, which is the case if you don't have e bumblebee + bbswitch installed.
Got an error: "There was an error parsing that key. Check that the key is valid and try again." Cool.
Edit: It seems to like my key now...?
I've been signing my commits for at least a year now so it's nice that they added this. I think it adds another layer of author verification other than maybe SoB.
It's very easy to be a part of the the problem when you're not contributing to a solution. It's also very easy to say a lot about nothing. I mean that in that you source no projects that have gone the way you described.
That is completely subjective. A lot of people hate Unity, the same way people hate every DE that exists. So much so that some do not even use a DE. Using a DE as an argument for Ubuntu's advantage is weak as they're usually ambiguous. I say usually because it tends to be that Unity, like Mir, isn't really adopted into any other distribution in official repositories. Even more so after Mir's release, since it'll be dependent on it.
Maybe you should actually use something before forming an opinion on it. Your lack of knowledge with vim is pretty obvious given that you didn't know that you could use your mouse.
The point of vim and its key bindings is to not have to use anything other than the keyboard (and keys that are not too off from the home row), so it's not the best of both worlds at all. Having to click on something forces someone to use their mouse, breaking their concentration and wasting time on clicking on a tab.
I would more than likely fall under the second type. Growing up relatively poor my family didn't have a computer, and neither did the majority of other family members. It wasn't until my mid teens that I finally had access to a computer and at that time MySpace was popular amongst friends so only thing I got into at the time was HTML and CSS. It wasn't until years later that I picked up a lower level language. At times I feel jealous of those that had access to a computer at a young age and were exposed to learning a language, but in the long run that doesn't really matter as long as both types can do the same thing. I didn't grow up writing programs but that doesn't mean I'm slow to pick anything up.
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: Yes
Technologies: C++, Rust, JavaScript (ES6), Bootstrap, Node.js, express.js, sequelize.js, React, jQuery, MySQL, PostgreSQL
Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7C6DF5T6DH1bHhFRTN2XzN6OH...
GitHub: https://github.com/0X1A
Email: [email protected]
I'm a "recent" grad looking to get my first full-time position. Please do not contact me if you're looking for 10+ years experience or if you want to fill a senior role.