The latest Fallthrough episode is live where we chat Go's decision on error handling proposals.
Personal Website | https://matthewsanabria.dev |
GitHub | https://github.com/sudomateo |
https://twitter.com/sudomateo | |
YouTube | https://youtube.com/@sudomateo |
Personal Website | https://matthewsanabria.dev |
GitHub | https://github.com/sudomateo |
https://twitter.com/sudomateo | |
YouTube | https://youtube.com/@sudomateo |
The latest Fallthrough episode is live where we chat Go's decision on error handling proposals.
One more piece of content before I'm out for surgery this week, btw. I went back to Arch, btw. I documented my installation, btw.
@moe I wanted to get into more of the non-code work I use AI for but I wanted to keep the blog short.
It's much of the same but focused on:
- Learning. Explain a PDF. Deep research a topic. Provide examples of things.
- Automating menial tasks (e.g., write product descriptions, create a workout plan).
- Rubber ducking. Not just for code but for life. It's nice to have the AI assume a persona and chat with it to flesh out your own ideas.
Since code is my code that was the focus.
I wrote about how AI is useful for adults. Particularly adults that are time constrained with real responsibilities.
We continued the AI discourse conversation from Oxide & Friends with the wonderful Steve Klabnik.
Jujutsu VCS is becoming more popular lately so I published a video tutorial for it on YouTube. Leave Git behind and come into the glorious future of Jujutsu. Enjoy!
https://youtu.be/MR6KSB6I_60?feature=shared
#jujutsu #jj #git #vcs #github #linux #programming #software
@darryl_ramm @bcantrill @oxidecomputer @ahl
I'm with you! Really everyone that's at the company should be familiar with the company's product and have some level of experience using it that they bring into their role.
@darryl_ramm @bcantrill @oxidecomputer @ahl
I've only experienced the micro managing PMs in my career thus far. At least that's what I've felt. The one issue with PMs that I've seen consistently is they are unable to look out into the future to set the direction for the product because they themselves don't actually use the product to truly understand what customers need. That's always made me frustrated.
I don't know why I ever left Arch Linux. It's fun to use and perfect for programming work. I'm back now!