nayminlwin

joined 1 year ago
[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 5 points 6 days ago

Butterfly stroke. Technique's still terrible but I cam clear, may be, 30 meters in one go. Because if the nerve problems in my leg, I decided to drop jogging and start swimming again.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

Pineapples and anchovies.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

KeepassXC, Syncthing, Orgmode ecosystem.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

My first smartphone is HTC and it looked like yours, but with android.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 months ago

For me, inkscape is the easier PDF editor.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

And silicons' nowhere near as energy efficient as biological neurons. There needs to be a massive energy breakthrough like fusion or actual biological processors becoming a thing to see any significant improvements.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 3 points 3 months ago

Can't help but think of it as a scheme to steal the consumers' compute time and offload AI training to their hardware...

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 15 points 7 months ago (3 children)

There's already a lot of people rewriting stuff in Rust and Zig.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 3 points 7 months ago

I was looking for what you said a few years ago out of curiosity before and remember looking into something called Shibboleth. I didn't looked into it in details but it seems to cover identity and policy management. Not sure about the rest of the features you need though.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 11 points 7 months ago

Oh yeah... The Fall, American Gods, Sex Education. She just kept getting more and more gorgeous.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 6 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Indie games. Tremendous respect for indie devs.

[–] nayminlwin@lemmy.ml 5 points 7 months ago

Been daily driving sway for over 5 years now. There were a few problems along the way. I used to have JWM and then XFCE as a back up in case wayland fails. I really only need to go into them when there's a need for screen sharing. But then, I mostly live in terminal and browser. Low graphic games I play seems okay. The most demanding one I played is probably Starcraft 2 and it plays well even on my crappy 7 years old laptop with intel graphics.

 

I have very simple needs for file hosting and syncing. The files are mostly small text files and documents. And I need to access them from linux, windows and android devices.

Just a simple SFTP account on one of my work servers is probably enough for hosting. I guess the focus is on reliable client side syncing. Changes made the files from clients should sync seamlessly with some basic conflict handling just in case.

Can anyone recommend your current setups and sync clients in use?

 

Any one here has any experience with teaching 8 to 12 years old kids Linux?

 

My day job involves a fair bit of coding and I do most of the stuff in the terminal. But there is one sore spot that still bugs me to this day. All terminal emulators I've used don't have complex text layout support.

CTL is something required by Arabic and Brahmic scripts. I'm from Myanmar and Myanmar script is one of the Brahmic family of scripts. I've seen Indians also having this problem with their Devanagari script as well. I mean I don't need it too often but when I do, I have to open up a GUI text editor to edit.

I just want to know if there's something inherently fundamental in terminal emulators that makes it hard to support CTL? Is there even a terminal emulator with CTL support?

 

Over 10 years ago, I had this sort of a prediction that, with the massive adoption of a dynamic language like javascript on both client/server sides and test-driven development gaining a lot of ground, the future of programming would be dynamic and "feedback-driven". As in, you would immediately see the results of your code as you type, based on the tests you created. To naively simplify, imagine a split screen of your code editor and a console view showing relevant watch expressions from the code you're typing.

Instead what happened was the industry's focus shifted to type safety and smart compilers, and I followed along. I'm just not smart enough to question where the whole industry was heading. And my speck of imagination on how coding would have looked like in the future wasn't completely thought out. It was just that, a speck of imagination that occurred to me as I was debugging something tedious.

Now, most of the programming language world, seem to be focusing on smarter compilers. But is there some language or platform, that focus instead on a different kind of programming paradigm (not sort of OOP, FP paradigm, may be call it the programming workflow paradigm?). May be it comes with a really strong debugger tooling that's constantly giving you feedback on what your code is actually doing. Think REPL on steroids. I can imagine there would be challenges with parsing/evaluating incomplete code syntax and functions. So I guess, the whole compiler/translator side has to be thought out from the ground up as well.

Disclaimer: There's a good chance I simply don't know what I'm talking about because I'm no language designer or even close to understanding how programming languages and it's ecosystems are created. Just sharing some thoughts I had as a junior dev back in the day.

 

Just wanna know if there's anyone managing and supporting a company-wide linux desktop deployment.

What are the hurdles during first adoption phase, what day to day support is like and which software are being used?

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