@rem I have access to Cursor at work. I’ve found it mostly useful for writing the skeletons of test cases (that I then have to fix up), and writing non-production scripts for things (that I often have to fix the guts of, but at least it can find files, distribute work via promise queues, produce some pretty output).
Does it save me time? Who knows. Does it help to motivate me to actually write that spike script I procrastinate on starting? Sure!
@stibbons looks like you can get the curves for about 60c each on Bricklink, find an Australian seller and price should be reasonable.
Probably cheaper than printing at that price?
@janl I was there for the React one. Had popped over from Poland while on a family holiday, not knowing anyone there.
The conference, and all the people I met, inspired me decide to focus on JS/frontend!
@stibbons you didn’t ask, but my go to waffle and American pancake recipe is pretty simple:
1c SR flour
2 tbsp sugar
1c milk (I make it from powdered)
1 egg
2 tbsp oil
Vanilla extract
Whisk dry ingredients, whisk wet ingredients, add dry to wet a few tbsp at a time and whisk. I do the wet ingredients in a 1L jug so can just pour straight from there when it’s ready.
Add flour to get the right consistency.
@stibbons this looks promising: https://www.brickstore.dev/
I’ve been meaning to sort all our Lego at some point but suffer from analysis paralysis as to how to actually store it all when sorted. We have probably tens of thousands of pieces.
BrickStore is a BrickLink offline management tool. It is **multi-platform** (Windows, macOS and Linux as well as iOS and Android), **multilingual** (currently English, German, Spanish, Swedish and French), **fast** and **stable**. Some things you can do with BrickStore much more efficiently than with any web based interface: * Browse and...