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Erez Zukerman shares the story of launching the ErgoDox EZ on Indiegogo (May 2015), what it takes to create customizable ergonomic keyboards, the benefits of split keyboards and custom key layouts, repairability and longevity, community engagement, and the attention to detail required in everything they create. We talk through their keyboard lineup, our personal experience with how we mouse and keyboard...we cover it all.
Erez Zukerman shares the story of launching the ErgoDox EZ on Indiegogo (May 2015), what it takes to create customizable ergonomic keyboards, the benefits of split keyboards and custom key layouts, repairability and longevity, community engagement, and the attention to detail required in everything they create. We talk through their keyboard lineup, our personal experience with how we mouse and keyboard...we cover it all.
Hey there! Welcome to Accessibility Minute, your weekly look at Assistive Technology, those clever tools and devices designed to help people who have difficulties with vision, mobility, hearing, or other special needs A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the ErgoDox EZ ergonomic keyboard by ZSA. Another ergonomic solution from the same company is […] The post AM563 Moonlander keyboard first appeared on Assistive Technology at Easter Seals Crossroads.
Hey there! Welcome to Accessibility Minute, your weekly look at Assistive Technology, those clever tools and devices designed to help people who have difficulties with vision, mobility, hearing, or other special needs! As I mentioned in a couple of blogs last month, using an ergonomic keyboard can help prevent a repetitive strain injury (or RSI) […] The post AM560 ErgoDox EZ Keyboard first appeared on Assistive Technology at Easter Seals Crossroads.
Kristoffer snackar skrivande - och tangentbord - med Augustin Erba, journalist och författare av bland annat kåseriet Jag är osams med mitt tangentbord. Diskussionen handlar till stor del om vad som är lika - väldigt mycket - och olika mellan att skriva skönlitteratur och kod. Men givetvis diskuteras också vad som egentligen hände när Augustin provade på ett Ergodox EZ, vad som är problemen med “vanliga” tangentbord, och vad man egentligen vill uppnå med att förändra hur man skriver. Dessutom funderar man över sina sämsta tangentbordsvanor, och en hel del annat. Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @thieta, @krig, och @bjoreman på Mastodon, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi, eller handla något i vår butik. Länkar Augustin Piratförlaget Jag är osams med mitt tangentbord - Augustins kåseri ABC 80 ZX Spectrum BASIC Assembler QWERTY Morse Har Morsesignalister påverkat hur Qwertylayouten blev som den blev? Fortran Subrutiner Prolog Erlang AXE-växlarna Elixir Polariserat ljus P3 historia Ergodox EZ IBM Model M Civilization Keyboardio Apples vision pro Typewriter mode, finns exempelvis som plugin till Obsidian Powerbook 1400c Nada Second system syndrome Titlar Alternativa tangentbord Jag tror att jag programmerade innan du var född Riktiga programmerar programmerade i assembler Gemensam bakgrund i Basic Optimalt enligt något kriterie Optimerat för pekfingervalsen Jag kan själv En och en halv miljon skönlitterära tecken om året Tillräckligt tillintetgjord Enter på höger pedal Skriva lika snabbt som jag tänker Att lösa små rebusar En roman kan också behöva felsökas Är det här en Nisse-replik?
Ett somrigt prylsnack. Kristoffer frågar om Fredriks mikrofon, Fredrik frågar om Kristoffers alla tangentbord (och blir sugen på fler), och så diskuteras Apples Vision pro trots att Kristoffer inte vet om han vill prata om det. Visst vore det fint om vi byggde saker som behövde färre resurser för att göra samma sak? Som Apples datorer med M-kretsar. Fredrik är mer positiv och tror det kan bli något, även om det är massor av resurser för att öppna sitt Excelark på ett nytt sätt. Microsofts hetsiga sätt kan få vad som helst att bli töntigt. Fredrik har fixat med Obsidian på telefonen. Obsidian är orimligt klockrent för vad det gör. Olika muskelminne för olika tangentbord. Kristoffer har skaffat fler och mindre tangentbord och fascineras av hur han fritt kan växla layout på vissa tangentbord, men bara en layout på andra. Det är spännande med hjärnplasticitet. Vad skulle Kristoffer göra om han designade sitt helt eget tangentbord? Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi, eller handla något i vår butik. Länkar Shure SM 7 B Thomann Shure SM 57 Shure beta 87A Marco Arments mikrofonlista Focusrite Vocaster two - Fredriks ljudgränssnitt Six colors om Vocaster two Audient ID14 MKII - Kristoffers ljudgränssnitt Audio hijack Hololens Vision pro Snow crash Obsidian Dataview Obsidians inställningar och teman är kopplade till valvet - Fredriks inställningar nollställdes för att han satte upp ett nytt valv på iCloud drive Maestral Öppna buggar i Maestral Paste URL into selection Obsidians publiceringsfunktion Imac G3 Imac G4 Kuben Dana Sibera skapade bilder på hårdvara som aldrig fanns En annan sammanställning av Siberas hårdvaruskapelser ZSA - som gör Ergodox-EZ och Moonlander Intervjun med Kristoffer om hans arbetsverktyg Preonic Ferris sweep Hands down-layouten Beekeeb Chocofi wireless Corne Totem, av GEIST DASBOB Keezyboost40 - med stor LCD Kailh choch sunset 42keebs.eu Ramaworks M50-A Waterfowl Sofle Kyria Dygma defy Dygma raise Microdox bud - tangentbordet som såg ut “lite som ett splittat Planck” med aluminiumcase Cantor Piantor QMK Home row mods Titlar Smör i örat Bluetootha till trummorna Följ med mig till guidekabelns slut Jag är så väldigt ointresserad Mer datorkraft än någonsin Mindre resurser till att göra samma sak En idé om att saker ska bli bättre Jag kan öppna mitt Excelark nu Saker som är gjorda av trä och metall En dröm om något bättre Jag har inte den drömmen Claes Hemsworth Orimligt klockrent Där kan jag bara skriva hands down Utanför EU och handbyggt Rita sin egen PCB Bara skift på tummen Jag vill ha färre tangenter
4/9 WTM Tokyo International Women's Day 2023 Women Tech Terrace 2023裏話 WomenTechmakersのテーマ #DareToBe WomenTechmakersのイベント開催フォーマットに則っていた話 ScalaMatsuriさんのCode of Conduct キーボード話 HHKBキーボード キーボード配列 US or JIS キーボード変更によるコンテキストスイッチが子どもが圧倒的に早い話 エルゴノミクスキーボード Surface Ergonomic Wireless Keyboard ErgoDox EZ Emacsキーバインド 小指が攣るEmacsキーバインド Nreal Airをディスプレイにしてるエンジニアの話 フィードバックは #momitfm で募集しています
In this episode, we discuss time travel messaging, UX problems, and a lifestyle lens. Whatever you measure is what you optimize for, and like all decisions, that choice has consequences. If you don't design for something, you might find yourself fighting against it instead. Whether you pay it now or later, the cost comes due. The goal is to be able to look at your future self and say “You're welcome.” Questions answered (abbreviated): - ExakrowDapiff: What message do you want to give your future self? - hossimo: What is your favorite mobile or desktop app tool that you open without thinking and enriches your life? - Fraser_: Any CharaChorder updates? - challosis: Please tell us about how CharaChorder is whenever it shows up! Things mentioned: - https://bearable.app/ - CharaChorder (https://www.charachorder.com/) - ErgoDox EZ (https://ergodox-ez.com/) and the ZSA Moonlander (https://www.zsa.io/moonlander/) To stay up to date with all of our buttery goodness subscribe to the podcast on Apple podcasts (apple.co/1LxNEnk) or wherever you get your audio goodness. If you want to get more involved in the Butterscotch community, hop into our DISCORD server at discord.gg/bscotch and say hello! Submit questions at https://www.bscotch.net/podcast, disclose all of your secrets to podcast@bscotch.net, and send letters, gifts, and tasty treats to http://bit.ly/bscotchmailbox. Finally, if you'd like to support the show and buy some coffee FOR Butterscotch, head over to http://moneygrab.bscotch.net.
It's that magical time of the year again. Brittany and Nick catch up on Nick's experience at Rubyconf then dive into their holiday gift picks for 2021. Do you agree? Have more picks? Tweet to @brittjmartin and @Schwad4HD14 with your thoughts. Brittany's Picks Code & Supply Coding Pennants (https://codeandsupply.storenvy.com/collections/1392656-coding-pennants) Jumpstart Pro (https://jumpstartrails.com/pricing?ck_subscriber_id=361084039) Chill Pill V4 (https://www.etsy.com/listing/793151627/chill-pill-v4?ref=shop_home_feat_4&pro=1) LL Bean Tech Tote (https://www.llbean.com/llb/shop/111891) Monolisa Font (https://www.monolisa.dev/) Scribd (https://www.scribd.com/g/6oin5k) Nick's Picks SKÅDIS (IKEA) (https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/skadis-pegboard-white-10321618/) Wired Magazine Subscription (https://www.wired.co.uk/subscribe) Ergodox EZ (https://ergodox-ez.com/) Tailwind UI Components (https://tailwindui.com/pricing) Sponsored By: Honeybadger (https://www.honeybadger.io/) Honeybadger makes you a DevOps hero by combining error monitoring, uptime monitoring and check-in monitoring into a single, easy to use platform. Go to Honeybadger.io (https://www.honeybadger.io/) and discover how Starr, Josh, and Ben created a 100% bootstrapped monitoring solution. Scout APM (http://scoutapm.com/rubyonrails) Try their error monitoring and APM free for 14-days, no credit card needed! And as an added bonus for Ruby on Rails listeners: Scout will donate $5 to the open-source project of your choice when you deploy. Learn more at http://scoutapm.com/rubyonrails (http://scoutapm.com/rubyonrails).
Just for the heck of it and because this is upload 101, I talk about mechanical keyboards with Josh, Franklin and Tommy. A special celebration for my 100 published episodes milestone.Josh on Twitter.Franklin on Twitter.Tommy on Twitter.Josh uses a homebuilt Ergodox, an Ergodox EZ and a Moonlander.Franklin uses the Ultimate Hacking Keyboard.Tommy uses an IQUnix A80 Explorer. Jeroen uses an Atreus and an IQUnix L80 Formula Typing.This is the Model-100 mentioned. This is the DAS Keyboards mentioned.This is Josh' Moonlander layout.Intro on keyboard switches by Switch and Click.How to Choose The BEST Mechanical Keyboard For You! This doesn't take split layout keyboards into account though.Please rate me on Apple Podcasts.Send me feedback on SpeakPipeOr contact me through twitterNewsletter, sign up!My book: Being a Lead Software DeveloperLead Software Developer Learn best practices for being a great lead software developer. Support the show (https://pod.fan/appforce1)
Fredrik och Tobias snackar Moonlander - uppföljaren till det delade tangentbordet Ergodox EZ som Tobias använt och gillat i ett par år. Vi värmer upp med att prata om hur knepigt det kan vara att få tiden och energin att gå ihop - så att man till exempelvis med gott samvete kan vara med i en podd då och då. Det kan vara svårt att koppla av, och till och med när man lyckas blir det inte alltid så avkopplande som man hoppats. Skulle man kunna se en ökad stress under det senaste året till följd av pandemin? Sedan blir det tangentbord på allvar! Tobias berättar vad skillnaderna är mellan Moonlander och Ergodox EZ, och vad han tycker om dem. Det blir ganska mycket diskussion av tangenters placering och nåbarhet, speciellt med fokus på tumkluster - grupper av tangenter som är placerade för att användas just av tummarna. Avsnittet sponsras till vår stora glädje av GleSYS - eminenta VPS:er i egna miljövänliga datorhallar på svensk mark. Oavsett om du behöver en Linux- eller Windows-VPS, en Kuberneteslösning, eller en Gitlabserver kan du komma igång på några minuter via GleSYS smidiga kontrollpanel. Vi diskuterar också lutning av tangentbordet, något Fredrik helt saknar erfarenhet av men som Tobias experimenterat en del med. Vi pratar också saker Tobias tycker lite mindre om, belysning, och givetvis vilka switchar han satt i tangentbordet. Som bonus redogör Tobias för vad det faktiskt kostar att köpa sig ett Moonlander när tull och moms och liknande landat ovanpå allt annat. Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Ett enormt tack till Daniel Nyström för alltför vänlig assistans med mastringen av avsnittet! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi, eller handla något i vår butik. Länkar Moonlander Podden Developers! Developers! på Instagram Planck Atreus Tumklustret på Ergodox EZ Tumklustret på Moonlander Kyria GleSYS - veckans sponsor GDPR Terraform VPS Vmware KVM Privata nätverk Gitlab Plesk Kubernetes Rancher Jitsi GleSYS datorhallar och miljöarbete glesys.se Kailh speed copper Kailh box brown Cherry MX brown Ergodoxkonfiguratorn QMK - den tangentbordsfirmware Ergodox och många andra använder sig av Ergodox satellite Microsoft sculpt-tangentbord Titlar Mer att göra på jobbet En stressbaserad podd Den extra raden Evolution av Ergodox Hur är det tänkt att man ska nå dem? Funderingar kring tumklustren De känns inte nära Pianotangenten En jättebra evolution Lite högre upp än själva klicket Då byter jag färg på tangentbordet Många lutningsvarianter Ett arbetsverktyg
話してる人 マーク(tetuo41) 36歳男性。既婚。一児の父です。 須貝(sugaishun) 38歳男性。既婚。一児の父です。 話したこと オープニング コロナでネタが無い キーボード談義 静電容量無接点方式 親指シフト HHKB ERGODOX EZ Keychron K3 NIZ Atom 68 White RAMA WORKS KARA KINESIS Advantage2 :3ildcat エンディング いつもの宣伝
話してる人 マーク(tetuo41) 36歳男性。既婚。一児の父です。 須貝(sugaishun) 38歳男性。既婚。一児の父です。 話したこと オープニング コロナでネタが無い キーボード談義 静電容量無接点方式 親指シフト HHKB ERGODOX EZ Keychron K3 NIZ Atom 68 White RAMA WORKS KARA KINESIS Advantage2 :3ildcat エンディング いつもの宣伝
On this week's episode, Steph and Chris begin wrapping up 2020 with a review of their 2019 top 10 list. They share what's changed, what's stayed the same, and what they'd like to see more of in the coming year. This episode is brought to you by: ScoutAPM (https://scoutapm.com/bikeshed) - Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Indeed (https://Indeed.com/bikeshed) - Click through and get started with a free seventy five dollar credit for your first job post Last year's top 10 countdown list (https://www.bikeshed.fm/226) ErgoDox EZ (https://ergodox-ez.com/) Leopold FC750 (https://mechanicalkeyboards.com/shop/index.php?c=171&l=product_list) Keybordio Atreus (https://shop.keyboard.io/products/keyboardio-atreus) Prettier (https://prettier.io/) Prettier Ruby (https://github.com/prettier/plugin-ruby) Elm (https://elm-lang.org/) Code Hospitality (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHzWG1FltaE) Testing Library (https://testing-library.com/) Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of The Bike Shed!
Tobias och Fredrik snackar. Tobias senaste stora projekt med att bygga Plex byggkedja har gett resultat - senaste uppdateringen av verktygen som ingår gick som en dans. Fredrik är tillbaka på jobbet, har lite fler bollar i luften än vanligt, och har varit med och hittat en sällsynt serverkraschbugg med många rörliga delar. Sedan blir det tangentbordssnack - Tobias snackar om de problem eller irritationsmoment han upplever med sitt Ergodox EZ, och hur nyss lanserade Moonlander löser problemen. Sist men inte minst: Tobias har bytt huvudwebbläsare från Firefox till Edge! Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @antikristoffer, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi. Länkar Avsnitt 376, 377, 378, och 379 - snack med stordatorfolk på SEB Concepts i C++ Templates i C++ Ergodox EZ Ergodox Moonlander Planck EZ Ergodox - öppen källkodsprojektet Avsnitt 158 - tidigt tangentbordssnack Microsoft sculpt-tangentborden Matias ergo pro Truly ergonomic keyboard Crkbd Tobias tangentbordslayout Edge Trident - Microsofts tidigare webbläsarmotor Chromium Blink Mozilla sade nyligen upp en hel massa folk Privacy badger HAR-filer Apple-Epic-historien Titlar Den beständiga delen av den här podcasten Det har varit … en sommar Modernhetskedjan Väldigt mycket gaffatejp Förklaringen på vad ett concept är Jag är en C++-programmerare som bara skriver Python Fast i C++98 En intressant multibugg Tumklustret Inte en tangent jag trycker på när jag skriver En fantastiskt mycket bättre layout Mina fingrar på hemraden Mycket närmare skrivbordet Köpa något som är färdigdesignat Det har hänt mycket sedan 2016-05-31 Sedan slutade jag resa Jag köper hellre ett färdigt tangentbord Ett Ergodox som är förbättrat Uppgraderad och nedslimmad Den enda webbläsare som egentligen betyder någonting Precis som Chrome kändes i början
This week, Justin's iCloud sync breaks. We also discuss ergonomics and how important it is to invest in your body while you work, and the complications of managing workloads. Shownotes vim (https://www.vim.org/) tmux (https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki) Nexstand (http://www.nexstand.com/) MX Vertical (https://www.logitech.com/en-us/product/mx-vertical-ergonomic-mouse) Ergodox EZ (https://ergodox-ez.com/) Microsoft Sculpt (https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/products/keyboards/sculpt-ergonomic-desktop/l5v-00001) Managing Workload Discussion (https://community.effectiveremotework.com/t/juggling-ideas-and-projects-while-being-overwhelmed/5707/2?u=justindirose)
Fredrik och Kristoffer börjar med att irritera sig på Slack. Vi utgår från att vara konkret irriterade på Slacks funktion för trådar och går därifrån vidare till att diskutera problemen med att lägga till funktioner över tid och hur vildvuxet och ofärdigt det kan bli, oavsett eller kanske speciellt om man ser sig som agil, flexibel, och kunddriven. Diskuterar någon numera att utveckla något med en vision? Och finns det någon som är bra på att ta bort saker? För att balansera all negativitet snackar vi sedan tangentbord en stund. Kristoffer har också skaffat sig ett fyrtioprocentstangentbord och vi diskuterar hur det känns såhär långt. Det blir givetvis mycket diskussion om layouter, var det kunde tänkas finnas fler och färre tangenter, med mera. Kristoffer diskuterar också hur han försöker layouterna på sina två aktivt använda tangentbord att matcha och skilja sig lagom mycket. Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @iskrig, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi. Länkar IRC Homer Simpsons bil The auteur theory of design Daniel Stenberg gör Curl Google wave Planck EZ Kbd4x Ergodox EZ QMK Ergodox webbaserade tangentbordskonfigurator US international alt-gr Windowstangentbordslayouter Ukulele - layoutredigeringsapp för Mac Dvorak Colemak Svorak Kailh speed bronze Avsnittet med Ergodox EZ-grundaren Erez Jack Humbert olkb.com Board makers Preonic hette tangentbordet med lite fler knappar Kristoffers tangentbordslayouter Hypercritical John Siracusa Titlar Hur mycket bättre skulle inte mitt liv vara utan trådar En massa folk som sitter och undrar vad de ska göra Underkanaler i kanalerna Ett grenande flöde Vi har inte nått Git än Tidsresor i Slack-kanaler Ingen gräns för hur icke-linjärt det kan vara Komplikationen med trådar Det är inte färdigtänkt Sluta lägga till saker Homer får designa precis allt vi använder Hundratusen bra features Tillsammans med andra saker som andra kunder behöver Man måste våga göra sig ovän med folk Allting ska försöka vara allting, för alla, hela tiden Helheten blir Homer Simpsons bil Den allmäna onda cirkeln Curl är ju han Det mänskliga perspektivet i fokus Google jobbar inte på mänsklig skala Inga döda tangenter Ett helt eget äventyr
Zürich Facebook och saker det gör som vi inte gillar. Vi gillar egentligen inte Facebook som sådant heller, men det går i alla fall nedåt för dem Aquaman - det kan inte bli många BM där … SEMESTER! Vi diskuterar våra planer för sommaren Jocke lämnar in 15” MBP till Apple för batteribyte efter eldfara Så spelar man in Discord med Audacity på Linux Fredriks tangentbordssaga går vidare, inklusive köp av en riktigt fånig kabel Hjälp, mina GT smakar inte lika underbart längre! (Fast den senaste var bättre igen …) Jocke skruvar datorer i sändning Trädgårdsarbete - det är ett blomsterår i år. Allt växer och blommar så det knakar. Dropbox förändras, ingen gillar. Kan vi byta och klara oss bra ändå? En vecka kvar av DMZ-nyheter… Och Jocke är fortfarande nöjd med mindre skrivande, få smarta prylar och att klyva mer ved Var borde vi ha poddparty? Förslag välkomnas! Länkar Zürich Schweizerfranc Libra - Facebooks kryptovaluta Den hemska artikeln om hur det är att moderera Facebook * Artisten tidigare känd som Prince och hans symbol Facebookanvändandet minskar Aquaman DC Justie league Swamp Thing Alan Moore En eldfängd Macbook pro Audacity Pulseaudio ALSA - Advanced Linux sound architecture Sommarskuggan Ergodox EZ 40%-tangentbord KBD4x - modellen Tobias köpte Ortolinjära tangentbord Ergodox 40%-tangentbord - Planck EZ QMK Dvorak Svorak Cyberduck Mountain duck Trello Atlassian Dropbox paper Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-172-bra-antiklimax.html.
Aaron is on the Ruby core team, the Rails core team, and the team that takes care of his cat, Gorby puff. During the day he works for a small technology company called GitHub. Someday he will find the perfect safety gear to wear while extreme programming. Show Notes Aaron at RailsConf 2013 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kgUL_FfUZY) Ruby (https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/) RubyKaigi (https://rubykaigi.org/) Andouillette (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andouillette) ErgoDox (https://www.ergodox.io/) Cherry MX Switches (https://www.keyboardco.com/blog/index.php/2012/12/an-introduction-to-cherry-mx-mechanical-switches/) ErgoDox EZ (https://ergodox-ez.com/) Planck (https://olkb.com/planck) Planck Light (https://drop.com/buy/massdrop-x-olkb-planck-light-mechanical-keyboard/talk) Alfred (https://www.alfredapp.com/) Gorby Thunderhorse (https://twitter.com/gorbypuff) Recommendations Ruby on Rails (https://rubyonrails.org/) Working Effectively with Legacy Code (https://www.amazon.com/o/ASIN/0131177052/parpaspod-20) Ruby Community (https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/community/) Aaron Patterson Twitter (https://twitter.com/tenderlove) Instagram (https://instagram.com/tenderlove) Personal Page (http://tenderlovemaking.com/) Parallel Passion Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/parpaspod) Twitter (https://www.twitter.com/parpaspod) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/parpaspod) Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/parpaspod) Credits Wesual Click (https://unsplash.com/@wesual) for the header photo Tina Tavčar (https://twitter.com/tinatavcar) for Parallel Passion logo Jan Jenko (https://twitter.com/JanJenko) for intro/outro music
Fredrik och Tobias snackar … tangentbord! Tobias har tagit ytterligare ett steg i sin tangentbordsresa och skaffat ett 40%-tangentbord att använda när han inte är hemma vid sitt Ergodox EZ. Varför gjorde han det, hur funkar det att montera sitt tangentbord när det levereras i bitar likt en IKEA-möbel, och vilka ändringar har han behövt göra för att leva med så få tangenter? Fredrik frågar om allt. Som avslutning diskuterar vi Gris utan några spoilers, ett underbart spel som Tobias rekommenderade direkt när det släpptes strax före jul. Alla borde spela, det är inte svårt och underbart vackert och stämningsfullt, och finns till de flesta plattformar. … och så lite, lite Destiny. Det kändes som att lösa en svår bugg eller avsluta en ny finess. Avsnittet sponsras till vår stora glädje återigen av Developers bay - Sveriges främsta agentur och nätverk för IT-specialister som numera finns i både Göteborg och Stockholm! Developers bay hjälper dig som frilansar att hitta intressanta uppdrag, och ger dig ett nätverk av kollegor och trevliga aktiviteter. Surfa in på developersbay.se eller skicka ett mejl till hello@developersbay.se om du vill veta mer! Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @iskrig, @itssotoday och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Länkar Developers bay - veckans sponsor Kristoffers presentation från Linuxconf AU Tobias ska snacka på Stockholm CPP Foo café Stockholm Ergodox EZ Ortolinjäritet - varför? Truly ergonomic keyboard Mathias tactile pro QMK 40%-tangentbord Candykeys KBD4X Kailh speed copper - Tobias rekommenderar tyvärr inte MDA Big bang Developers bay - veckans sponsor Avsnittet om att jobba som frilansare hello@developersbay.se - bara att mejla om du vill veta mer Vortex pok3r Arduino Teensy MDA Iris-tangentbordet, delat och vackert Gris Gris soundtrack på Spotify Super meat boy Celeste Berlinist Unity Tobias Youtubekanal Titlar Tillbaka från hobbitland A-raden är förskjuten lite åt höger Ett tangentbord som är rakt Jag har dragit mig för att bygga mitt eget tangentbord Lödmusklerna Fyra rader med tangenter Jag vill inte löda det där Ledande hål Mitt navigationslager Skift på båda sidor av tangentbordet Jag försöker hålla det till fyra lager Jag lyckades konfigurera bort mitt eget flashläge Snyggt på ett inte-trippel-a-sätt Elektroniskt med retroinstrument
Panel: Chris Fritz Joe Eames Divya Sasidharan Special Guests: Filipa Lacerda, Jacob Schatz, and Phil Hughes In this episode, the Views on Vue panel talks to Filipa Lacerda, Jacob Schatz, and Phil Hughes about GitLab’s journey with Vue. Jacob started as a front-end developer at GitLab and now has joined the data science team as a staff data science engineer. Filipa has been a front-engineer and works with the CIDC and security teams at GitLab. Phil has been at GitLab for 2 ½ years and most recently has been working on the web IDE. They talk about how GitLab decided to adopt Vue, the benefits that Vue brings their company, why they decided to move away from jQuery, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Filipa, Jacob, and Phil intros All work at GitLab Distributed team at GitLab Work with Vue One team across multiple time zones How did GitLab decide to adopt Vue? The benefits of Vue Creating a proof of concept Rails previously jQuery Vue allows them to use much less code and be more organized Vuex Un-opinionated VS highly opinionated frameworks Did you find Vue to be stifling in any way? Could you organize ode the way you wanted to organize it? Vue made their lives easier Didn’t have a style guide or plan in the beginning Why they moved away from jQuery Performance issues and the large amount of code with jQuery Node.js CoffeeScript to JavaScript And much, much more! Links: GitLab Vue Rails jQuery Vuex Node.js CoffeeScript JavaScript @FilipaLacerda Filipa’s GitHub Filipa’s GitLab @jakecodes Jacob’s GitLab @iamphill iamphill.com Phil’s GitHub Phil’s GitLab @gitlab Sponsors Kendo UI Digital Ocean FreshBooks Picks: Chris vuemeetups.org The Witness His request system Divya Sarah Drasner vue-vscode-extensionpack The Cost Of JavaScript - Addy Osmani - Fluent 2018 Netlify Joe Framework Summit Evan You Tweet Jayne - Overwatch Coaching on YouTube Filipa Sarah Drasner Tweet Coffee Table Typography Jacob Flask The Americans Phil Center Parcs ErgoDox EZ
Panel: Chris Fritz Joe Eames Divya Sasidharan Special Guests: Filipa Lacerda, Jacob Schatz, and Phil Hughes In this episode, the Views on Vue panel talks to Filipa Lacerda, Jacob Schatz, and Phil Hughes about GitLab’s journey with Vue. Jacob started as a front-end developer at GitLab and now has joined the data science team as a staff data science engineer. Filipa has been a front-engineer and works with the CIDC and security teams at GitLab. Phil has been at GitLab for 2 ½ years and most recently has been working on the web IDE. They talk about how GitLab decided to adopt Vue, the benefits that Vue brings their company, why they decided to move away from jQuery, and more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Filipa, Jacob, and Phil intros All work at GitLab Distributed team at GitLab Work with Vue One team across multiple time zones How did GitLab decide to adopt Vue? The benefits of Vue Creating a proof of concept Rails previously jQuery Vue allows them to use much less code and be more organized Vuex Un-opinionated VS highly opinionated frameworks Did you find Vue to be stifling in any way? Could you organize ode the way you wanted to organize it? Vue made their lives easier Didn’t have a style guide or plan in the beginning Why they moved away from jQuery Performance issues and the large amount of code with jQuery Node.js CoffeeScript to JavaScript And much, much more! Links: GitLab Vue Rails jQuery Vuex Node.js CoffeeScript JavaScript @FilipaLacerda Filipa’s GitHub Filipa’s GitLab @jakecodes Jacob’s GitLab @iamphill iamphill.com Phil’s GitHub Phil’s GitLab @gitlab Sponsors Kendo UI Digital Ocean FreshBooks Picks: Chris vuemeetups.org The Witness His request system Divya Sarah Drasner vue-vscode-extensionpack The Cost Of JavaScript - Addy Osmani - Fluent 2018 Netlify Joe Framework Summit Evan You Tweet Jayne - Overwatch Coaching on YouTube Filipa Sarah Drasner Tweet Coffee Table Typography Jacob Flask The Americans Phil Center Parcs ErgoDox EZ
Tobias and Fredrik talk to Erez Zukerman, CEO and co-founder of Ergodox EZ, creators of the ergonomic mechanical keyboard of the same name. Tobias is a fan and user since a while back, and Erez tells us about why you decide to make a keyboard, how you manage to ship hardware on time the first time, how things are going and a little bit about what’s in store for the future of Ergodox EZ. We wrap up with a few listener questions. If you have more, just send them to Erez or us, we will grab any reasons to talk even more about keyboards! Thanks a lot for taking the time Erez! Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! Links Ergodox EZ Erez Zukerman Dominic Beauchamp Dmitry Slepov Tibbo Massdrop Kinesis advantage Ortholinear keyboards - keys are in aligned lines, rather than offset Microsoft natural keyboard Kinesis advantage 2 Colemak Dvorak Truly ergonomic Mathias ergo pro Keyboardio Ultimate hacking keyboard Shenzen OEM - original equipment manufacturer Indiegogo Cherry keyswitches Gateron - another manufacturer of keyswitches Key chatter Kailh switches Kailh bronze (thick gold) Typing, Ghost in the shell style MX speed silver TMK QMK Jack Humbert olkb.co The keyboard configurator web interface Maxim Gladkov Basecamp DHH pimpmykeyboard.com Signature plastics Florian Degran React Mobx State tree Graphql Ergodox EZ on Twitter Titles Me wanting a keyboard A lot of money for me to pay for a box of parts Ortholinear and bowl-shaped Just because it was cool and expensive I went from being able to type 120 words per minute to being able to type 10 The full strange experience My first foray into hardware We shipped on time Go with the right partner The interests are aligned Extreme transparency Each keyswitch is a moving part We’re sorry, we have an enormous lead time Thousands of keyswitches which we can’t use Big enough to get Cherry’s attention I’m still emotional about that Developing software is my refuge Such a gangster name for a keyswitch Like typing on popcorn The key pushed the socket out of the PCB Direct support from the plastic Just like you pull a tooth Be genuinely nice Favor-driven development A number of frantic pairing sessions I’m not looking for the hockey stick We’re not great for everyone We make it in an office building in Taiwan We pay models to hang out with the keyboard I don’t try to convince you I give you the facts and I trust you Geeking out with keyboards
Tobias and Fredrik talk to Erez Zukerman, CEO and co-founder of Ergodox EZ, creators of the ergonomic mechanical keyboard of the same name. Tobias is a fan and user since a while back, and Erez tells us about why you decide to make a keyboard, how you manage to ship hardware on time the first time, how things are going and a little bit about what’s in store for the future of Ergodox EZ. We wrap up with a few listener questions. If you have more, just send them to Erez or us, we will grab any reasons to talk even more about keyboards! Thanks a lot for taking the time Erez! Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @iskrig and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! Links Ergodox EZ Erez Zukerman Dominic Beauchamp Dmitry Slepov Tibbo Massdrop Kinesis advantage Ortholinear keyboards - keys are in aligned lines, rather than offset Microsoft natural keyboard Kinesis advantage 2 Colemak Dvorak Truly ergonomic Mathias ergo pro Keyboardio Ultimate hacking keyboard Shenzen OEM - original equipment manufacturer Indiegogo Cherry keyswitches Gateron - another manufacturer of keyswitches Key chatter Kailh switches Kailh bronze (thick gold) Typing, Ghost in the shell style MX speed silver TMK QMK Jack Humbert olkb.co The keyboard configurator web interface Maxim Gladkov Basecamp DHH pimpmykeyboard.com Signature plastics Florian Degran React Mobx State tree Graphql Ergodox EZ on Twitter Titles Me wanting a keyboard A lot of money for me to pay for a box of parts Ortholinear and bowl-shaped Just because it was cool and expensive I went from being able to type 120 words per minute to being able to type 10 The full strange experience My first foray into hardware We shipped on time Go with the right partner The interests are aligned Extreme transparency Each keyswitch is a moving part We’re sorry, we have an enormous lead time Thousands of keyswitches which we can’t use Big enough to get Cherry’s attention I’m still emotional about that Developing software is my refuge Such a gangster name for a keyswitch Like typing on popcorn The key pushed the socket out of the PCB Direct support from the plastic Just like you pull a tooth Be genuinely nice Favor-driven development A number of frantic pairing sessions I’m not looking for the hockey stick We’re not great for everyone We make it in an office building in Taiwan We pay models to hang out with the keyboard I don’t try to convince you I give you the facts and I trust you Geeking out with keyboards
Hajime Morita さんをゲストに迎えて、ドキュメント、キーボード、CPU、自作言語処理系などについて話しました。 スポンサー: Ergodox EZ Show Notes Perl Toolchain Summit 2018 – Tatsuhiko Miyagawa’s Blog Essential Admits the Essential Phone Has a Bad Camera Misreading Chat – Nonsensical CS Paper Talk by Morrita and Mukai Anchor Jeff Bezos makes Amazon execs read 6-page memos in meetings ErgoDox EZ: An Incredible Mechanical Ergonomic Keyboard ★ Community Blog - 握力王 vs 日本男児 ヘルシーすぎるプログラマ対談 Tesla Autopilot Chief Jim Keller Leaves for Job at Intel Computer Architecture, Sixth Edition XLA Overview TensorFlow Tensor Comprehensions Swift for TensorFlow project home page The Julia Language PyTorch Why Swift For TensorFlow KotlinConf 2017 - My Life as a Tech Transfer Monad by Erik Meijer 巨象も踊る Papers We Love 10 Key Points of Ruby Development
Tobias, Kristoffer och Fredrik dyker direkt tillbaka in i tangentbordsdjungeln och snackar om Tobias senaste investering och upplevelse: det ergonomiska, klickande, tvådelade och extremt inställningsbara Ergodox EZ. Vi hinner med Tobias intryck, historien om hur han ställt in tangenterna, och också lite detaljer om olika Cherry MX-switchar och deras egenskaper och variabler. Efter tangentbordssnacket följer vi upp Tobias solosnack om stress med mera från förförra avsnittet - tusen tack för alla positiva kommentarer som kommit! Det blir mentalt välmående, skillnaden på lite nedstämdhet, stress och depression och årstidernas direkta och indirekta effekter på ens sinnestillstånd. Vi pratar lite om olika åtgärder för att koppla bort social media och andra stressfaktorer på och utanför jobbet. Och hur mycket formen på budskapet spelar roll för hur man kan ta till sig det, kanske speciellt när det handlar om självhjälp. Man behöver inte ha jobbat i branschen i tjugo år och ha en podd för att kunna prata om stress, välbefinnande och allt annat! Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @iskrig, @itssotoday och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Länkar Ergodox EZ Matias ergo pro Cherry MX blue Cherry MX red Cherry MX clear Cherry MX brown Cherry MX speed silver Animation av en clear-switch Animation av en blue-switch Cherry mx super black Prova på-tangenter för olika switchar Tobias uppackningsvideo OBS QMK - Quantum mechanical keyboard Pok3er Tobias tangentbordslayout Iris Keyboardio Ergodox infinity Tobias solosnackade i slutet på förförra avsnittet Mastodon Instapaper Becoming functional Videon Tobias fick skickad till sig Titlar Jag kände inte för att löda ihop mitt tangentbord Cherry MX blue är ju en fantastisk keyswitch Klicket sitter bredvid tangenten En väldigt liten Newton Bodybuilderhänder Muskeltummar Artisinal keyboard factory Nordic left brace Allting du gör med ringfingret Mellanslag med högerhanden Ett högerenter En layoutsommelier Populärt på tangentbordsmässan i Graz Man kan fördjupa sig i kamaxlar Många små saker som bygger på varandra
Andrew receives his ErgoDox EZ and can no longer compute. Julian takes the iPhone onboard as a device in his life, but has a few more itches to scratch alongside a realisation. Julian also got a Surface Book 2, we discuss how Windows power management, the USB-C life and new iPads with Face ID. Finally, a chat about our favourite podcasts and when we listen to them, with a public announcement and a special after show clip.
We provide you with updates to Spectre and Meltdown from various BSD projects, a review of TrueOS from Linux, how to set up FreeBSD on ThinkPad x240, and a whole bunch of beastie bits. This episode was brought to you by Headlines KPTI patch lands in FreeBSD -current (https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=328083) After a heroic effort by Konstantin Belousov kib@FreeBSD.org, the first meltdown patch has landed in FreeBSD This creates separate page tables for the Kernel and userland, and switches between them when executions enters the kernel, and when it returns to userland It is currently off by default, but you are encouraged to test it, so it can be merged back to the release branches. Set vm.pmap.pti=1 in /boot/loader.conf The existing implementation of PCID (process-context identifiers), is not compatible with the new PTI code, and is disabled when PTI is enabled, decreasing performance. A future patch will use PCID in a way that is compatible with PTI. PCID allows the OS to annotate memory mappings to specific processes, so that they can be flushed selectively, and so that they are only used when in the context of that application. Once the developers are relatively confident in the correctness of the code that has landed in -current, it will be ported back to FreeBSD 10 and 11, and released as a security advisory. Apparently porting back to FreeBSD 11 only has some relatively simple merge conflicts, but 10 will be more work. Former FreeBSD Security Officer Dag-Erling Smørgrav has created a meltdown testing and PoC tool (https://github.com/dag-erling/meltdown) that you can use to check your system. It is not finished yet, and doesn't seem to work with newer processors (haswell and newer). The first partial mitigation for Spectre variant 2 (https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/328011) for bhyve on AMD64 has also been committed The latest information is always available on the FreeBSD Wiki (https://wiki.freebsd.org/action/edit/SpeculativeExecutionVulnerabilities) *** Some thoughts on Spectre and Meltdown (http://www.daemonology.net/blog/2018-01-17-some-thoughts-on-spectre-and-meltdown.html) Colin Percival breaks down how these vulnerabilities work, with same nice analogies What is a side channel: I want to know when my girlfriend's passport expires, but she won't show me her passport (she complains that it has a horrible photo) and refuses to tell me the expiry date. I tell her that I'm going to take her to Europe on vacation in August and watch what happens: If she runs out to renew her passport, I know that it will expire before August; while if she doesn't get her passport renewed, I know that it will remain valid beyond that date. Her desire to ensure that her passport would be valid inadvertently revealed to me some information: Whether its expiry date was before or after August. Spectre Variant 1: I tell my girlfriend that I'm going to take her on vacation in June, but I don't tell her where yet; however, she knows that it will either be somewhere within Canada (for which she doesn't need a passport, since we live in Vancouver) or somewhere in Europe. She knows that it takes time to get a passport renewed, so she checks her passport and (if it was about to expire) gets it renewed just in case I later reveal that I'm going to take her to Europe. If I tell her later that I'm only taking her to Ottawa — well, she didn't need to renew her passport after all, but in the meantime her behaviour has already revealed to me whether her passport was about to expire. This is what Google refers to "variant 1" of the Spectre vulnerability: Even though she didn't need her passport, she made sure it was still valid just in case she was going to need it. Spectre Variant 2: I spend a week talking about how Oxford is a wonderful place to visit and I really enjoyed the years I spent there, and then I tell her that I want to take her on vacation. She very reasonably assumes that — since I've been talking about Oxford so much — I must be planning on taking her to England, and runs off to check her passport and potentially renew it... but in fact I tricked her and I'm only planning on taking her to Ottawa. Meltdown: I tell my girlfriend that I want to take her to the Korean peninsula. She knows that her passport is valid for long enough; but she immediately runs off to check that her North Korean visa hasn't expired. Why does she have a North Korean visa, you ask? Good question. She doesn't — but she runs off to check its expiry date anyway! Because she doesn't have a North Korean visa, she (somehow) checks the expiry date on someone else's North Korean visa, and then (if it is about to expire) runs out to renew it — and so by telling her that I want to take her to Korea for a vacation I find out something she couldn't have told me even if she wanted to. Final thoughts on vulnerability disclosure The way these issues were handled was a mess; frankly, I expected better of Google, I expected better of Intel, and I expected better of the Linux community. When I found that Hyper-Threading was easily exploitable, I spent five months notifying the security community and preparing everyone for my announcement of the vulnerability; but when the embargo ended at midnight UTC and FreeBSD published its advisory a few minutes later, the broader world was taken entirely by surprise. Nobody knew what was coming aside from the people who needed to know; and the people who needed to know had months of warning. Contrast that with what happened this time around. Google discovered a problem and reported it to Intel, AMD, and ARM on June 1st. Did they then go around contacting all of the operating systems which would need to work on fixes for this? Not even close. FreeBSD was notified the week before Christmas, over six months after the vulnerabilities were discovered. Now, FreeBSD can occasionally respond very quickly to security vulnerabilities, even when they arise at inconvenient times — on November 30th 2009 a vulnerability was reported at 22:12 UTC, and on December 1st I provided a patch at 01:20 UTC, barely over 3 hours later — but that was an extremely simple bug which needed only a few lines of code to fix; the Spectre and Meltdown issues are orders of magnitude more complex. To make things worse, the Linux community was notified and couldn't keep their mouths shut. Standard practice for multi-vendor advisories like this is that an embargo date is set, and nobody does anything publicly prior to that date. People don't publish advisories; they don't commit patches into their public source code repositories; and they definitely don't engage in arguments on public mailing lists about whether the patches are needed for different CPUs. As a result, despite an embargo date being set for January 9th, by January 4th anyone who cared knew about the issues and there was code being passed around on Twitter for exploiting them. This is not the first time I've seen people get sloppy with embargoes recently, but it's by far the worst case. As an industry we pride ourselves on the concept of responsible disclosure — ensuring that people are notified in time to prepare fixes before an issue is disclosed publicly — but in this case there was far too much disclosure and nowhere near enough responsibility. We can do better, and I sincerely hope that next time we do. CPU microcode update code for amd64 (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20180115073406) (https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=151588857304763&w=2) Patrick Wildt (patrick@) recently committed some code that will update the Intel microcode on many Intel CPUs, a diff initially written by Stefan Fritsch (sf@). The microcode of your CPU is basically the firmware that runs on your (Intel) processor, defining its instruction set in terms of so called "microinstructions". The new code depends, of course, on the corresponding firmware package, ported by Patrick which can be installed using a very recent fw_update(1). Of course, this all plays into the recently revealed problems in Intel (and other) CPUs, Meltdown and Spectre. Now Theo has explained the workings of the code on openbsd-tech, detailing some of the challenges in updating microcode on CPUs where your OS is already starting to run. Theo hints at future updates to the intel-firmware package in his mail: (https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=151588857304763&w=2) Patrick and others committed amd64 Intel cpu microcode update code over the last few days. The approach isn't perfect, but it is good enough for a start. I want to explain the situation. When you fw_update, you'll get the firmware files. Upon a reboot, it will attempt to update the microcode on your cpus. Maybe there isn't a new microcode. Maybe your BIOS has a copy of the microcode and installs it before booting OpenBSD. This firmware installation is done a little late. Doing it better will require some work in the bootblocks to find the firmware files, but time is a bit short to do that right now. The branch-target-cache flushing features added in new microcode are not being used yet. There is more code which has to be written, but again other work is happening first. Also, Intel is saying their new microcodes sucks and people should wait a little. "Hi, my name is Intel and I'm an cheating speculator". Several developers are working on mitigations for these issues, attacking the problem from several angles. Expect to see more updates to a CVS tree near you soon. Intel: as a *BSD user, I am fucking pissed! (https://malcont.net/2018/01/dont-like-meltdown-spectre-releated-bugs-handled/) I wasn't going to write anything on the recently found x64 architecture – related bugs. I'm not a kernel developer nor even a programmer and I can't say that I have a solid understanding of what Meltdown and Spectre attacks are. Also there already is a ton of articles and posts written by people who have no grasp of the subject. I'm however a malcontent and I find this a good way to express my feelings: Intel: as a *BSD user, I am fucking pissed! Meltdown, Spectre and BSD – the “pissed” part Part of my work is UNIX-like systems administration – including BSDs and Linuces. As much as I am happy with Linux changes already made, I am beyond pissed about how the BSDs were handled by Intel – because they were not. FreeBSD Security Team received some heads-up just before Xmas, while OpenBSD, NetBSD and DragonflyBSD teams received no prior warnings. Meltdown and Spectre attacks are hard to perform. It is a hard work to mitigate them in the software, as the bugs lay in the CPUs and are not fixable by microcode updates. Developers are trying to mitigate these bugs in a way that will deliver smallest performance losses. A lot of time consuming work is needed to fix CPU vendors' mistakes. Linux developers had this time. BSD developers did not. BSD user base too small? BSD user base is small in comparison to Linux. Seems that it's too small for Intel. PlayStation4 consoles are FreeBSD-based (and use AMD CPUs) but I think it's safe to say that gaming devices are not the most important systems to be fixed. Netflix serves their content off FreeBSD but the bugs are not remotely exploitable (possibly not including JavaScript, but it's running someone's code locally) so there's probably not much harm to be done here either. However gamers and Netflix aren't the only ones who use *BSD systems. I'd say that there is more than a few FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and DragonFlyBSD servers on the internet. In March 2017, Intel promised “more timely support to FreeBSD”. They knew about flaws in their CPUs in June and decided that a timely manner is the end of December – short before the embargo was to be lifted. Intel and Google (probably Intel more): it was your job to pick the correct people to whom the bugs can be disclosed. In my humble opinion you chose poorly by disclosing these issues with ONLY Apple, Microsoft, and the Linux Foundation, of OS vendors. You did much harm to the BSD community. Intel: It's your bugs. And you offered “more support” to the FreeBSD Foundation less than 3 months prior to being informed (my guess is that you knew much earlier) on the flaws in YOUR products. I don't want to write more here as the wording would be too strong. Interview - Viewer Questions These days, do you consider yourself more of an programmer or a sysadmin? Which one do you enjoy more? Does FreeBSD/BSD enable your business or would another OS suit your needs just as well? You've hinted that you use FreeBSD as part of your business. Can you elaborate on that and give some technical detail on how it's used in that environment? If you were allowed three wishes for anything at all to be implemented or changed in ZFS, what would they be, and why? Per Dataset throughput and IOPS limiting Per-File Cloning and/or zfsmv (move a file from one dataset to another, without copying) Cluster support Allan, you have previously mentioned that you have worked on FreeBSD on MIPS, what made you choose the Onion Omega over something like the Raspberry Pi? What is BSD Now's association with Jupiter broadcasting, and how did the relationship come to be? Jupiter seems to be associated with several Linux-themed podcasts, and I'm wondering how and why BSD Now joined Jupiter. The two communities (the Linuxes and BSDs) don't always seem to mix freely -- or do they? What kind of keyboard is that? Have you ever tried an ErgoDox? The ErgoDox EZ is made by a Canadian. You mentioned when doing one of your talks on UCL for FreeBSD that you had only recently learned C. I am also aware of your history also on contributing to the FreeBSD handbook and to documentation in general. Given you started with C relatively recently, what made you want to learn it, how quickly did you pick it up, and is it your favourite language? It is most inspiring to me, as you are clearly so talented, and of all the languages I have learned (including C++), I still prefer C in my heart of hearts. I'd be really interested to hear your answer, many thanks. *** News Roundup LinuxAndUbuntu Review Of TrueOS A Unix Based OS (http://www.linuxandubuntu.com/home/linuxandubuntu-review-of-trueos-a-unix-based-os) Trust me, the name TrueOS takes me back to 1990s when Tru64 UNIX operating system made its presence. TrueOS is PC-BSD's new unified brand built upon FreeBSD-CURRENT code base. Note that TrueOS is not a Linux distro but is BSD Unix. FreeBSD is known for its cutting-edge features, security, scalability, and ability to work both as a server and desktop operating system. TrueOS aims at having user-friendliness with the power of FreeBSD OS. Let us start with going into details of different aspects of the TrueOS. TrueOS History ? TrueOS was founded by Kris Moore in 2005 with name PC-BSD. Initial version focused to make FreeBSD easy to use starting with providing GUI based installer (to relatively complicated FreeBSD installer). In the year 2006, PC-BSD was acquired by iXsystems. Before rebranding as TrueOS in Sept 2016, PC-BSD reached a stage starting considering better than vanilla FreeBSD. Older PC-BSD version used to support both x86 and x86-64 architecture. Kris Moore, the developer founder, says about rebranding: “We've already been using TrueOS for the server side of PC-BSD, and it made sense to unify the names. PC-BSD doesn't reflect server or embedded well. TrueOS Desktop/Server/Embedded can be real products, avoids some of the alphabet soup, and gives us a more catchy name.” TrueOS First Impression ? The startup is little longer; may be due to starting up of many services. The heavy KDE well suited to PC-BSD. The C++/Qt5 based Lumina desktop environment is light and fast. The Lumina offers an easy way to configure menu and panels. I did not face any problems for continuous use of two weeks on a virtual machine having the minimal configuration: 1 GB RAM, 20 GB hard disk and Intel 3.06 GHz i3 processor. The Lumina desktop is light and fast. The developers of Lumina know what they are doing and have a good idea of what makes a good IDE. As it happens with any new desktop environment, it needs some time to settle. Let us hope that they keep to the path they are on with it. Conclusion ? The TrueOS is impressive when consider it as relatively young. It is a daring step that TrueOS developers took FreeBSD Current rather than FreeBSD Stable code base. Overall it has created its own place from the legacy shadow of PC-BSD. Starting with easy installation TrueOS is a good combination of software and utilities that make the system ready to use. Go and get a TrueOS ISO to unleash the “bleeding edge” tag of FreeBSD Thinkpad x240 - FreeBSD Setup (http://stygix.org/nix/x240-freebsd.php) What follows is a record of how I set up FreeBSD to be my daily driver OS on the Lenovo Thinkpad X240. Everything seems to work great. Although, the touchpad needs some tweaking. I've tried several configurations, even recompiling Xorg with EVDEV support and all that, to no avail. Eventually I will figure it out. Do not sleep the laptop from the command line. Do it from within Xorg, or it will not wake up. I don't know why. You can do it from a terminal within Xorg, just not from the naked command line without Xorg started. It also will not sleep by closing the lid. I included a sudo config that allows you to run /usr/sbin/zzz without a password, so what I do is I have a key combo assigned within i3wm to run "sudo /usr/sbin/zzz". It works fine this way. I go into detail when it comes to setting up Xorg with i3wm. You can skip this if you want, but if you've never used a tiling window manager, it will handle screen real estate very efficiently on a laptop with a 12.5-inch screen and a touchpad. First, download the amd64 image for 11.1-RELEASE and flash it to a USB pen drive. For the Unices, use this: # dd if=FreeBSD-11.1-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img of=/dev/da0 bs=1M conv=sync Obviously, you'll change /dev/da0 to whatever the USB pen drive is assigned. Plug it in, check dmesg. Leave it plugged in, restart the laptop. When prompted, tap Enter to halt the boot process, then F12 to select a bootable device. Choose the USB drive. I won't go through the actual install process, but it is pretty damn easy so just look at a guide or two and you'll be fine. If you can install Debian, you can install FreeBSD. I will, however, recommend ZFS if you have over 4GB of RAM (my particular variant of the X240 has 8GB of RAM, so yours should have at least 4GB), along with an encrypted disk, and an encrypted SWAP partition. When prompted to add an additional user, and you get to the question where it asks for additional groups, please make sure you add the user to "wheel". The rest should be self-explanatory during the install. Now for the good shit. You just booted into a fresh FreeBSD install. Now what? Well, time to fire up vi and open some config files... CNN Article about CDROM.com and FreeBSD, from 1999 (https://www.cnn.com/TECH/computing/9904/08/cdrom.idg/index.html) Walnut Creek CDROM sells a lot of CD-ROMs, but it gives away even more data. Specifically, anyone who has Internet access is free to log into wcarchive (ftp.cdrom.com) and start downloading bits. Even with a good Internet connection, however, you should expect to be at it for a while. At the present time, wcarchive resides on half a terabyte (500 GB) of RAID 5-disk storage. Even if your 56-Kbps modem can deliver seven kilobytes per second, downloading the complete archive would take you 70 million seconds. Even then, some of the files would be more than two years out of date, so a bit of "back and fill" would be needed. Of course, nobody uses wcarchive that way. Instead, they just drop in when they need the odd file or two. The FTP server is very accommodating; 3,600 simultaneous download sessions is the current limit and an upgrade to 10,000 sessions is in the works. This translates to about 800 GB per day of downloads. Bob Bruce (Walnut Creek's founder) says he's thinking about issuing a press release when they reach a terabyte a day. But 800 GB isn't all that shabby.... The hardware Because FTP archives don't do a lot of thinking, wcarchive doesn't need a massive cluster of CPUs. In fact, it gets by with a single 200-MHz P6 Pentium Pro and a measly(!) 1 GB of RAM. The I/O support, however, is fairly impressive. A six-channel Mylex RAID controller (DAC960SXI; Ultra-Wide SCSI-SCSI) is the centerpiece of the I/O subsystem. Two channels link it to the PC ("Personal Computer"!?!), via a dual-channel Adaptec card (AHA-3940AUW; PCI to Ultra-Wide SCSI). An 256-MB internal cache helps it to eliminate recurring disk accesses. Four nine-drive disk arrays provide the actual storage. The two larger arrays use 18-GB IBM drives; the two smaller arrays use 9-GB Micropolis and Quantum drives. A separate 4-GB Quantum drive is used as the "system disk." The output side is handled by a single Intel 100Base-T controller (Pro/100B PCI), which feeds into the Internet through a number of shared DS3 (45 Mbps) and OC3 (155 Mbps) circuits. A detailed description of the system is available as ftp.cdrom.com/archive-info/configuration; The software The system software is rather prosaic: a copy of FreeBSD, supplemented by home-grown FTP mirroring and server code. Because of the massive hardware support, the software "only" needs to keep the I/O going in an efficient and reliable manner. FreeBSD, the "prosaic" operating system mentioned above, merits a bit more discussion. Like Linux, FreeBSD is open source. Anyone can examine, modify, and/or redistribute the source code. And, like Linux, an active user community helps the authors to find bugs, improve documentation, and generally support the OS. Unlike Linux, FreeBSD is derived from the Berkeley Unix code that forms the foundation for most commercial Unix variants. When you use the "fast file system" (cylinder groups, long file names, symbolic links, etc.), TCP/IP networking, termcap, or even vi, you are using Berkeley Unix additions. The version of BSD underlying FreeBSD, however, is "pure" BSD; don't look for the System V modifications you see in Solaris. Instead, think of it as SunOS, brought up to date with Kerberos, modern sendmail, an updated filesystem, and more. Solid, fast, and free! One of FreeBSD's finest innovations, the Ports Collection, makes FreeBSD a delight for open source application users. The Ports Collection automates the downloading, building, and installation (including de-installation) of 2,300+ open source packages. The company Walnut Creek CDROM has been around for several years now, so you are likely to be familiar with its offerings. You may not realize, however, that it provides the major financial support for FreeBSD. The FreeBSD support has two purposes. First, it provides the company with a solid base to run wcarchive and other massive projects. Second, it ties in with the company's mission of making software (and data) economically accessible. Bob Bruce, the firm's founder, is an interesting guy: laid back and somewhat conservative in manner, but productive and innovative in practice. Here is a possibly illustrative story. When Bob started selling CD-ROMs, disc caddies were selling for $15 each. Bob thought that was rather high, so he started investigating the marketplace. A long-distance call to Japan got him Sony's fax number; a series of faxes got him in touch with the salespeople. It turned out that caddies were available, in bulk, for only a few dollars each. Bulk, in this case, meant pallet-loads of 10,000 caddies. In an act of great faith, Bob purchased a pallet of caddies, then proceeded to sell them for five dollars each. The results were everything he might have wished. Folks who bought his CD-ROMs added caddies to their orders; folks who bought piles of caddies added in a disc or two. Either way, Walnut Creek CDROM was making a name for itself. Many pallet-loads later, the company is still selling caddies, making and distributing CD-ROMs, and giving away bits. Walnut Creek CDROM is a real open-source success story; its breadth and depth of offerings is well worth a look. Beastie Bits OpenBSD adds kqueue event support to DRM, to detect device changes like HDMI cables being plugged in, and trigger randr events (https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/b8584f4233dc11a328cd245a5843ec3d67462200) Thesis describing QUAD3, a unix-like, multi-tasking operating system for the 6502 processor (https://archive.org/details/AMultiTaskingOperatingSystemForMicrocomputers) Windows is getting chmod and chown... (https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/2018/01/12/chmod-chown-wsl-improvements/) Timeline: How they kept Meltdown and Spectre secret for so long (https://www.theverge.com/platform/amp/2018/1/11/16878670/meltdown-spectre-disclosure-embargo-google-microsoft-linux) bsd.network is a *BSD-themed Mastodon Instance (https://bsd.network/): Peter Hessler is administering a new Mastodon instance, running in an OpenBSD VM on top of an OpenBSD vmm hypervisor Computer-Aided Instruction on UNIX (https://virtuallyfun.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/whfUb.pdf) AsiaBSDCon 2018 Travel Grant Application Now Open (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/asiabsdcon-2018-travel-grant-application-now-open/) AsiaBSDCon 2018 FreeBSD Developers Summit Call for Proposals (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/asiabsdcon-2018-freebsd-developers-summit-call-for-proposals/) LinuxFest Northwest 2018 Call for Proposals (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/linuxfest-northwest-2018-call-for-proposals/) Feedback/Questions Jason - Dont break my ports (http://dpaste.com/05PRNG2) Wilyarti - show content (http://dpaste.com/1BG8GZW) https://clinetworking.wordpress.com/2017/12/08/data-de-duplication-file-diff-ing-and-s3-style-object-storage-using-digital-ocean-spaces Scott - Your show is Perfect! (http://dpaste.com/0KER8YE#wrap) Ken - Community Culture (http://dpaste.com/0WT8285#wrap)
Daisuke Murase さんをゲストに迎えて、キーボード、Discord, Slack, プロダクティビティ, VSCode, CallKit, iOS 10, Wena などについて話しました。 Show Notes Vortex Poker II ErgoDox EZ プログラマーの三大美徳 Discord Reactiflux is moving to Discord Call Recorder for Skype Message buttons and the Slack API Slack上で倉庫番を遊べるhubot-slack-soukoba Setting reminders Rebuild: 93: Time Management For Agents (typester) Rebuild: 139: Productivity Extremist (higepon) Timebar Menubar Countdown Plan Toggl Visual Studio Code Extending Visual Studio Code Microsoft/vscode: Visual Studio Code Enhancing VoIP Apps with CallKit - WWDC 2016 外務省: 在外選挙 wena wrist Pebble 2, Time 2 + All-New Pebble Core Screen comparsion for current and new Pebble apps OnePlus 3 総務省 | 海外から持ち込まれるWi-Fi端末等の利用
Ob die Discover-Funktion beim Musik-Streaming was taugt, warum Trello mal so richtig dufte ist und wie man sich sein Leben mit dem Frühjahrsputz ruinieren kann sind nur einige Fragen, um die es sich bei dieser Beinahekollision dreht. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Follow-up Erst mal das wichtigste… in den letzten Show Notes hat diese GIF gefehlt: So… nun zum eigentlichen Tagesgeschäft. Slack Tools SlackStack - jede Menge coole Slack Tools Airmail iOS Airmail ist auf iOS angekommen und großartig. Die App unterstützt Push Notifications für neue Emails und zeichnet sich durch seine extrem hohe Konfigurierbarkeit aus. Es ist fast ein bisschen zu viel, aber man kann es aushalten. Die Settings synchronisieren über iCloud mit der Desktop App (Kostenpunkt: 4.99€.). Der Fluch der Kollaboration Sind wir alle dem Kollaboration-Wahnsinn verfallen? Telestream Cloud Telestream ermöglicht jetzt auch das Cloud Encoding von Videos. Sehr sehr günstig, wenn man die Kosten eines Mac Mini daneben stellt (bei 30 Minuten pro Woche kommt man auf ca. 20$ / Jahr). Leider ist diese Wolke nicht brauchbar für die kleinen Zwecke, Andreas sieht aber die Verwendung in großen Firmen. Ergonomische Keyboards übertrieben Für unsere Freunde des ergonomischen Keyboards: Even I'll admit that this might be a bit much pic.twitter.com/lrDKOIcuOX— Kevin MacLeod (@AfterPad) February 2, 2016 Patrick’s erstes ist in der Zwischenzeit auch angekommen… Super excited to play around with my new 40% #mechanicalkeyboard — The Planck by Ortholinear Keyboards. A photo posted by Patrick Welker (@_patrickwelker) on Feb 3, 2016 at 2:21am PST … aber auf das ErgoDox EZ muss er noch warten. Apps dann auch wirklich komplett total deinstallieren Die Ausflüge den App Store zu debuggen scheint fast schon ein neues Steckenpferd von Andreas zu sein. Die unendliche Geschichte geht weiter, denn manche Apps bleiben selbst nach dem löschen noch auf dem Telefon und erscheinen dann beim Speicher als leeres Icon und heißen Null. Löscht man in der Settings App betroffene Apps, werden diese nach dem Aufruf desselben Bildschirms gleich wieder angezeigt. Der Trick ist sich per Xcode oder iOS Console den Log anzeigen zu lassen während man die App löscht. In der Console erscheint ein Hinweis zur App. Nochmal runter laden, nochmal löschen, weg, mehr Speicher frei. Tipp per Apple Support Communities. Tekken 3 Urkunde Wie wir später noch erfahren werden hat Patrick Frühjahrsputz gemacht. Jetzt kann er endlich belegen, was die westliche Welt schon lange wusste, nämlich, dass er Tekken 3 Champion ist/war. Day One 2 Release Day One 2 ist erschienen, aber die Jungs meinen nun leider vollkommen auf Drittanbieter verzichten zu können was den Sync angeht. Das Dropbox, Microsoft und Konsorten mehr Manpower haben, um sich gegen Angriffe von außen abzusichern ist klar. Inwiefern aber eine kleine Indiependentsoftwareschmiede da mithalten kann bleibt fraglich. Einziges Licht am Horizont ist die angekündigte Unterstützung für eine Private-Key-Verschlüsselung. Wer also den nächsten Welteroberungsplan festhält mittels Day One, sollte vorerst bei Version 1 verweilen. Music Discovery Nachdem Andreas in der letzten Sendung noch eine Alternative zum Musik hören gesucht hat, ist er nun mehr oder weniger bei Google Play Music gelandet. Das erlaubt 50.000 Songs für kostenlos und hat noch ein paar nette Features. Es ist wie iTunes, nur viel viel minimaler. Fehlende Tags runter geladener Titel können “automagisch” ergänzt werden. Die iOS App hat ein cooles Feature das in anderen Apps einfach fehlt: bitte lösche den lokalen Cache an Titeln. Das funktioniert relativ gut. Später erhofft er sich mit YouTube RED den ganz großen Mehrwert. Doch wie findet man nun neue Musik? Im Discovery Mode gibt es da das eine oder andere Hindernis zu überwinden. In Spotify kann man, auch im kostenlos-Modus, prima neue Musik finden. Einfach ein paar Künstlern folgen, oder ein paar Playlisten. Das funktioniert gut. Für neue Musik empfiehlt er jedoch Soundcloud bzw. Internet Radio. Vor allem durch Internet Radios kann man sehr sehr nieschige Titel finden. Allerdings nur, wenn das jeweilige Radio auch die Tags sendet. Sonst kann man sie höchstens wieder mit Shazam (iOS, Encore, Mac) oder SoundHound (oder ∞) “erkennen” lassen – mit Glück. Patrick empfiehlt noch Radium (iOS, Mac) welches bei ihm das Internet Radio streamt. Bei Andreas macht das TuneIn Radio (TuneIn Radio Pro). Das Schlusslicht bilden übrigens diese zwei Apps. Musik entdecken ist ein Feature, dass beide Apps groß schreiben (möchten). Man findet dort aber nur abgelutschte Top 100 Listen der, wenn überhaupt, großen Genres. Von weiterer Unterteilung Elektronischer Musik in speziellere Richtungen kann man nur träumen. Schade eigentlich. Wer also Musik entdecken möchte und einen der neuen, junge, wilden Streamingdienste nutzt, der kann es wie Patrick mit der alten Schule halten: Sucht euch einen Nutzer mit dem gleichen Musikgeschmack aus und folgt ihm oder seinen Playlisten. Alles in allem liefert ein solcher Kurator 10x bessere Ergebnisse als alles andere (auch die kurierten Beats Music bzw. Apple Music Geschichte kann da nicht mithalten). Ein letzter Nachtrag von Patrick ist noch “Off the Rip”, womit man sich Soundcloud-Lieder runterladen kann, komplett benannt und getaggt (inkl. Artwork). Eine Ode an Trello Svens ♥ schlägt nicht nur für den Kamelschutz, sondern auch für Trello. Was er gut findet hat er hier kurz aufgelistet: Kanban Beispiel Boards - was alles mit Trello geht Trello Android und iOS Apps Integrationen: Alfred, Launchbar, URL schemes → Workflow, Drafts, LCP IFTTT und Papier Workflows Power-Ups Trello Gold & Trello Business Auch Patrick findet immer mehr Anwendungsmöglichkeiten für Trello. Karten sind für die Kollaboration mit anderen ein leicht verständliches Medium, da Bilder und Links integriert werden können und alles schnell umsortiert werden kann. Trello ist für ihn ähnlich wie visual Bookmarking. Weshalb er aber trotzdem nicht was anderes nutzt: Bei Pinterest kann man nicht umsortieren, eine Markdown Textdatei ist flexibel, aber oft umständlicher (will man Bilder einbinden, diese selbst hosten und dann ggf. später auch wieder löschem). Kurz Trello bietet einfach mehr Vorteile, zudem kann man seine Boards auch teilen oder komplett öffentlich machen. Patrick hat persönliche Boards, zum Beispiel “Shopping Research” oder “DIY Projekte”, aber auch Familienboards. Vor jedem Urlaub wird eins angelegt, es gibt eins für Haushaltsverbesserungen und ausstehende Reparaturen. Eines der Boards listet alle geplanten Aktivitäten auf nach folgendem Schema: Checkliste (siehe #UC039 Reisetipps) Wanderliste Auflugsziele (global) Berlin Berliner Umland Deutschland Und die geplanten Anschaffungen werden so fest gehalten: Aufräumen - Loslassen lernen Vor einiger Zeit hat Patrick von Marie Kondo erzählt, welche an ihn herangetragen wurde. Deren Mission ist “Magic Cleaning: Wie richtiges Aufräumen Ihr Leben verändert”. Genau das hat er die letzten Tage gemacht. Dabei wurde er in ein Wechselbad der Gefühle geworfen. Von ‘Hurra 6 qm mehr Platz’ bis hin zu Verlustangst und Wegwerfscheu war alles mit dabei. Oft sagt man sich “Das ist doch noch gut in Schuss, warum sollte ich das wegwerfen” und man ertappt sich dabei Gründe zu finden, einen Gegenstand doch noch aufzuheben, weil man diesen ja gebrauchen könnte, wenn man endlich mal den Mond betritt in 10 Jahren. Wie man nun vorgehen kann, zeigt einem die Konmarie Technik. Gefordert ist lediglich Zeit, Stringenz und der Wille ehrlich mit sich zu sein, dann klappt es auch mit dem Ausmisten. Die Frau Kondo ist etwas kurios und radikal. Es lässt sich nicht wirklich alles praktikabel umsetzen, und so ist angeraten, sich die für einen selbst wichtigen Faustregeln selbst aus diesem Sachbuch rauszusuchen. Am Ende bleibt es jedem selbst überlassen, ob er wie Patrick 95% der Kindheitsfotos wegwirft oder doch lieber alte Scart-, FireWire-, und Fernsehkabel in 5 Kisten behält anstatt auf HDMI zu setzen. In dem Buch wird zudem noch erklärt, warum man seinen Geschwistern und Eltern nicht sein Eigentum “vererben” soll und warum dieses Vorgehen nur ein Aufschub und keine Trennung ist. Die Kernessenz ist auf jeden Fall wichtig und richtig gut: Nur Sachen zu besitzen, die einen glücklich machen. Unsere Picks 7 Days to Die ist ein Zombie Shooter im Minecraft Stil. Und wenn gecraftet werden kann, dann pickt Anreas das. Hier gibt es Sachen zu entdecken und zu bauen, verschiedene Gewehre und Pistolen. Doch 7 Days to Die wird als “Minecraft für Erwachsene” bezeichnet. Viel härter als das Kinderspiel, nicht so blockig, aber nicht minderer Spielspass – wenn du hart genug bist. Es empfiehlt sich den Humble Bundle Store im Auge zu behalten. 22,99€ ist der aktuelle Preis. Auf Steam für PC und Mac. -Sortly • Moving, Organizing and Inventory App hat Patrick geholfen für seine Aufräumaktion doppelt so lange zu brauchen, wie eigentlich nötig gewesen wäre. Mittels dieser Anwendung hat der Gute nämlich minuziös alles erfasst, getaggt und in Ordner verschoben was sich in seinem Besitzt befinden. Da man bei Sortly auch Fotos und Videos machen kann, bietet sich einem die Möglichkeit auch die Nadel im Heuhaufen wiederzufinden. Fotos können auch mit Pfeilen versehen werden (“Kiste ganz hinten unter dem Weihnachtsintimschmuck”) und Kisten können beim Umzug mit einem QR-Code versehen werden (so das man auf einem Blick weiß, was dort eigentlich drinnen ist). Neben “The Chickening” pickt Sven auch Meditation minus Esoterik!. Headspace ist ein extrem gutes Programme zur Entwicklung von Achtsamkeit, Ruhe und Übersicht im Bewusstsein. Nicht nur das Programme und der Sprecher (English), sondern auch die App selbst sind sehr gut gemacht. Einstieg kostenfrei, nach dem 10-teiligen Einführungskurs dann entweder Monats- (12.95 US$) oder Jahresabo (94.99 US$). Patrick’s Kurzresümee findet ihr hier: @friolz Im Prinzip reicht es sich zu belesen (statt App). Ich hab' für dich mal ein PlatzhirschKurzresümee verfasst: https://t.co/KlHIiUENwG— Patrick Welker (@_patrickwelker) January 22, 2016 . In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.