I really like it for devshells which is really all I use Nix for. Flake-parts automates so much boilerplate and improves the error messages so much compared to standard flakes. Definitely worth the time investment imo
I really like it for devshells which is really all I use Nix for. Flake-parts automates so much boilerplate and improves the error messages so much compared to standard flakes. Definitely worth the time investment imo
Yep, my block list is long. It’s updated occasionally. I call it “weeding the digital garden”. Negatively sprouts everywhere and it’s imperative to cull it asap.
The way I see it there’s far too many things in the digital world to care about, so I just care about basically none of them. I’d rather spend energy loving the people I love than being angry at what I see on the internet.
The internet is full of slacktivism and I find it’s more worthwhile to do something good rather than critiquing the bad and doing nothing.
My way is simple and stupid. I hit F12, then search for “rss” in the html and copy the link
If you’re on iOS, feeeed is kinda slick :)
Yeah, I can’t argue with that, it’s a shame :(
All the more reason to subscribe to independently owned ones if they’re available to keep them afloat :)
No specific recommendations, but I highly recommend following your local news orgs assuming you don’t live in a news desert.
The goal of big news companies is to get clicks for that delicious ad revenue and they don’t care about how predatory that is towards you.
Local news is much more community focused in my experience
If you’re happy with your solution, that’s great!
uv combines a bunch of tools into one simple, incredibly fast interface, and keeps a lock file up to date with what’s installed in the project right now. Makes docker and collaboration easier. Its main benefit for me is that it minimizes context switching/cognitive load
Ultimately, I encourage you to use what makes sense to you tho :)
You probably already know this, but for those who don’t, git can globally ignore patterns. It’s the first thing I set up after logging in. Honestly wish git just shipped this way out of the box (maybe match .DS_Store by name and some magic bytes?) with a way to disable it. Just for the sake of easier onboarding