Don't Look at the Keys
Every once in a while, you “discover” something so banal that it’s become a cliché, and yet it still feels like some deep insight. It’s a strangely humbling experience.
»Every once in a while, you “discover” something so banal that it’s become a cliché, and yet it still feels like some deep insight. It’s a strangely humbling experience.
»One of the most interesting rabbit holes to explore on Twitter is #plottertwitter. Under this hashtag, you’ll see a variety of computer-generated artwork and videos of plotting machines that sound like they’re being controlled by ancient floppy drive motors.
»iOS Shortcuts is one of my favorite additions to iOS in its past several iterations. I used its predecessor, Workflow, for a while, but I didn't invest too heavily in it because there was a nagging feeling in the back of my head that Apple would kill it at some point. However, they did the opposite!
»As of January 16, 2019, GCP’s Cloud Functions now natively support Golang! This post will briefly cover why this is a big deal and how one can begin to use Go in their cloud functions.
»2018 was a wild year. A lot happened. I lived in 4 different cities over the course of the year, worked 2 internships, and did a few weeks of traveling. It was a hectic year, but also one of the best in recent memory.
»I attempted to read more books in 2018 – and it paid off! I read several enjoyable books this year. Here were my favorites.
»I've been following a number of people that use iPad Pros for “real work”. I'm going on vacation for a couple weeks to Europe and I wanted to leave my laptop at home. That being said, I still wanted a “lifeline” computing device so that I could do some light writing or SSH into a server if necessary.
»At ReactConf 2018, the React team introduced a new set of APIs called “Hooks” that allow you to write large swaths of traditional class-based React components as functional components.
»Every once-in-a-while a game really sucks me in. Over my vacation in August, I got hooked on Wordscapes — a simple word game where you have to generate valid words from a bag of letters you’re provided to fill in a crossword puzzle. After a few hours playing this, I naturally began to wonder if there is an efficient algorithmic solution to this game.
»rustdoc is a great tool, but as of now there isn’t an official way to have its generated docs refresh as you make edits. Running cargo doc with the --open argument will open the generated docs in browser window. If you make changes to your source code, you'll need to re-run cargo doc to have the changes reflected in your browser. By chaining together a few other Rust tools, we can pretty easily get the functionality of live-reloading docs.