Notes from golang dev learning to use Rust.
I started by watching this (protip: 1.25x speed is about normal), and following along in vscode (my usual IDE, lately).
Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...
Based on this gist.
TODO
git log --reverse --max-count=1
master
: git rev-list --no-merges master --count
master
per author: git shortlog -s -n --no-merges master
master
: git rev-list --merges --first-parent master --count
If you want to see the commits in question, you can replace --count
with something like --pretty=oneline
.
curl -X PUT -T test_s3.txt -L "https://your-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/url-stuff" |
========================== | |
How Software Companies Die | |
========================== | |
- Orson Scott Card | |
The environment that nurtures creative programmers kills management and | |
marketing types - and vice versa. | |
Programming is the Great Game. It consumes you, body and soul. When | |
you're caught up in it, nothing else matters. When you emerge into |
04/26/2103. From a lecture by Professor John Ousterhout at Stanford, class CS142.
This is my most touchy-feely thought for the weekend. Here’s the basic idea: It’s really hard to build relationships that last for a long time. If you haven’t discovered this, you will discover this sooner or later. And it's hard both for personal relationships and for business relationships. And to me, it's pretty amazing that two people can stay married for 25 years without killing each other.
[Laughter]
> But honestly, most professional relationships don't last anywhere near that long. The best bands always seem to break up after 2 or 3 years. And business partnerships fall apart, and there's all these problems in these relationships that just don't last. So, why is that? Well, in my view, it’s relationships don't fail because there some single catastrophic event to destroy them, although often there is a single catastrophic event around the the end of the relation
Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...
// see: https://github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes
$ docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)
$ docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm
No, seriously, don't. You're probably reading this because you've asked what VPN service to use, and this is the answer.
Note: The content in this post does not apply to using VPN for their intended purpose; that is, as a virtual private (internal) network. It only applies to using it as a glorified proxy, which is what every third-party "VPN provider" does.