There was an earlier hn post on this: I wonder how effective ai coders are at translating libraries from one language to another. It’s plausible that they could be good at this I think it’s useful: anything from porting c++ code to rust to porting ecosystem libraries to languages that aren’t java/python/typescript
I suspect you could still find someone via the Pingpod slack, but another option would be to book a coach and play with them - they have multiple former olympians
Manhattan seems to have more staying power for vegan places than LA - our double zero branch is still here and new vegan places like neat burger have been opening. Not sure why, though
I feel a little surprised there are no mention of allergies in that article, e.g. that hopefully they’re planting female trees which remove pollen rather than male trees which produce more
Not 100% on topic, but another thing that I think schools can be bad at diagnosing is ADHD: in many cases it’s actually anxiety that manifests as ADHD-like symptoms, and the treatment or medications would be different for each.
Is it every three seconds? Or every time a process is run, kill the daemon within 3 seconds? Or even, only if the daemon spawns kill it within 3 seconds. The latter two wouldn't be nearly as impactful as the first, and the sandbox message didn't seem clear enough for me to tell.
Considering how much edge wants to gain back browser share, if they kept mv2 support the combination of supporting real ad blocking while still being a chromium browser is pretty appealing.
My past experience with (maybe more limited versions of) this is when you’re developing something and you throw a ‘true ||’ in there as part of that, in can get annoying to have to outsmart your environment to get your code to compile. But surprised at how many issues this can catch - seems worth the occasional extra pain.
I'm looking into client-side syntax highlighting as well at the moment and lezer popped up: https://lezer.codemirror.net/. It's directly based on tree-sitter but tailored to be more web friendly (and written by the same author as codemirror) - https://marijnhaverbeke.nl/blog/lezer.html
React native imo. Expo is terrific and the library ecosystem, while it might feel like it’s one step down from web JavaScript, is still robust enough for what you need since there are more than enough people out there shipping rn apps.
As someone who’s been quite interested in this type of work (Alexander technique/feldenkrais/etc. on the more education-for-performers side, or the various approaches used in personal training and physical therapy), Anatomy in Motion is great material for learning how to walk properly: https://findingcentre.co.uk/.
(Though find someone to teach you if you’re practically interested in improving your own walking.)
An underrated choice of the original diablo is that it would only show you a subset of story quests and boss monsters in a single play-through. A few (like the butcher) would always show up, but for most others there'd be multiple options for which story quest would be in the game.
A lot of games since include every quest in every playthrough (or change it based on what choices you make), and games like the Witcher 3 nailed having really well written side quests that weren't just filler. But enough players are completionists that it can feel exhausting to play those, and if you're a completionist the game often becomes less challenging because you're earning extra experience/gold.