POPULARITY
本期播客探讨了独立开发者在推出 App 和 SaaS 产品时面临的推广与销售挑战。 相较于 SaaS,App 的渠道分发更为复杂,需要通过应用商店的审核流程。在推广方面,由于国内用户更倾向于使用移动设备,且很多平台限制 URL 链接,App 的推广相对容易,而 SaaS 则更依赖于搜索引擎优化。付费转化上,App 的买断模式更容易被用户接受,而 SaaS 的订阅模式更符合其对持续维护的需求。嘉宾们最后建议开发者根据目标用户(是否熟悉 URL 和电脑操作)以及产品类型来选择适合的 App 或 SaaS,并探讨了更灵活的付费模式,如按年买断。 嘉宾、主播,和他们的产品 Randy Cusdis - Lightweight, privacy-first, open-source comment system Notepal - 浏览器插件,一键同步微信读书笔记到 Notion, Logseq, Readwise, flomo EpubKit - The best tool to convert web to ebook Adam Wen laike9m Clicknow - Mac 上最好的划词 AI 搜索 & 翻译,无需 API key 时间点 00:00 独立开发者:App 还是 SaaS?开篇与渠道分发 04:36 App 与 SaaS 的渠道分发差异及优势 06:02 国内外推广差异:URL 与 App Store 的对比 10:00 SEO 与 App 推广:国内外市场对比 13:29 国内 SaaS 推广困境:平台限制与传播难题 17:44 国内用户习惯与推广策略:微信、二维码与邮件 23:21 国内推广策略:绕过平台限制的尝试 27:22 SaaS 与 App 的付费转化及推广策略 37:43 播客推广的独特优势与付费模式选择 57:06 付费转化率与国内 SaaS 市场现状
#logseq versus #obsidian dos excelentes herramientas para la gestión del conocimiento con importantes diferencias entre ambas pero con sincronización No estaba del todo conforme con Obsidian por lo que te comentaré a lo largo de este episodio. Pero, antes de nada, quiero decirte que Obsidian es una herramienta excelente. Pero, como todo en esta vida, tiene sus pros y sus contras. Y, en mi opinión, Obsidian tiene mas pros que contras, en particular con el uso que actualmente le estoy dando, y por esta razón se queda actualmente conmigo. Esto no quita con que compare otras herramientas con Obsidian, en busca de la herramienta que resuelva los problemas que tengo actualmente con Obsidian, sin crearme otros distintos. Por esta razón decidí probar Logseq, lo que me ha llevado a este episodio del podcast Más información, enlaces y notas en https://atareao.es/podcast/645
#logseq versus #obsidian dos excelentes herramientas para la gestión del conocimiento con importantes diferencias entre ambas pero con sincronización No estaba del todo conforme con Obsidian por lo que te comentaré a lo largo de este episodio. Pero, antes de nada, quiero decirte que Obsidian es una herramienta excelente. Pero, como todo en esta vida, tiene sus pros y sus contras. Y, en mi opinión, Obsidian tiene mas pros que contras, en particular con el uso que actualmente le estoy dando, y por esta razón se queda actualmente conmigo. Esto no quita con que compare otras herramientas con Obsidian, en busca de la herramienta que resuelva los problemas que tengo actualmente con Obsidian, sin crearme otros distintos. Por esta razón decidí probar Logseq, lo que me ha llevado a este episodio del podcast Más información, enlaces y notas en https://atareao.es/podcast/645
本期节目探讨了独立开发者在选择开发 App 还是 SaaS 时的利弊。我们从多个角度进行了深入分析,包括开发效率、跨平台能力、所需设备、维护成本等。下期节目中我们会从产品发布和推广的角度进行比较,敬请期待。 总结起来:SaaS 在开发效率和资源模板方面更具优势,但在移动端的应用受到限制;而 App 开发则更依赖于特定的平台和设备,维护成本可能因操作系统更新和与其他应用的兼容性问题而上升。最终的选择还是要根据开发者的技术背景、目标用户和市场定位来决定。 嘉宾、主播,和他们的产品 Randy Cusdis - Lightweight, privacy-first, open-source comment system Notepal - 浏览器插件,一键同步微信读书笔记到 Notion, Logseq, Readwise, flomo EpubKit - The best tool to convert web to ebook Adam Wen 竹白 - 专为创作者设计的一站式工具 laike9m Clicknow - Mac 上最好的划词 AI 搜索 & 翻译,无需 API key 时间点 00:00 嘉宾和主播们都开发了哪些产品 05:53 App 与 SaaS 的定义与界限 09:14 开发效率 SaaS 由于资源丰富、模板易复用,开发效率通常高于 App,但 AI 工具缩小了两者的差距 18:47 跨平台性与移动端支持 SaaS 天然跨平台,但移动端支持受限;App 跨平台需借助 Flutter 等框架,但平台割裂问题依然存在。PWA 提供了一种折中方案,但用户使用习惯有待培养。 27:35 开发设备 SaaS 对开发设备要求低,App 则可能需要特定操作系统和高性能设备。远程桌面技术可以一定程度上解决 App 开发对设备的限制。 30:06 维护成本 维护成本方面,App 的维护成本并非一定低于 SaaS,操作系统更新、与其他 App 冲突等都可能带来维护难题。SaaS 的维护成本则主要体现在服务器和数据库的维护上。 38:09 国内开发环境的挑战与应对策略 国内 SaaS 开发需要考虑合规性、支付接口接入等问题,这部分成本和时间消耗不容忽视。支付集成方面,国内市场循环扣费的支付方案选择有限,对开发者资质要求较高。 48:36 App 发布、代码管理和用户反馈
OK, so this is weird... episode 123 features only the Southern Hemisphere!
Mi sistema de PKM en un PC (con Linux) y un iPhone. https://logseq.com/ https://workingcopy.app/ https://github.com/haydenull/logseq-plugin-git Envía tus comentarios a la cuenta en el Fediverso de sobre la marcha. ✨También puedes seguirla para recibir anuncios y estar al día✨ La música de la entradilla es If Pigs Could Sing, de Rolemusic, y se distribuye con licencia CC-BY 3.0
Autohotkey è un must, anche se un po' da smanettoni, permette di fare di tutto.. Total Commander indispensabile, se ben configurato risolve molti problemi.. Everything è assolutamente da installare.. la suite Microsoft Sysinternals è molto utile per identificare i problemi: Process Explorer, ProcDump, Autoruns, etc.. PDF24, ottimo per i PDF.. priPrinter stupendo per le stampe virtuali.. Espanso, un text expander, non semplice ma eccellente.. consigliata la suite NirSoft.. ah,Windows Repair Toolbox che raccoglie molti di questi software: https://windows-repair-toolbox.com/.. potrei continuare ancora con i tool
A trend I've noticed with Ai, is that it has shifted itself into the middleman position between everyone and the normal surfing of the web. While it may save the user time, could this be disrupting the very traffic that monetizes content on the internet? With this fundamental change in the monetization paradigm, a huge shift is coming to the web. What will it look like, and how should we prepare? Tune in to find out. Links to check out Descript (Link: https://tinyurl.com/bdhr75jr) Pinokio (Link: https://pinokio.computer/) ComfyUI and Automatic 1111 (Link: https://tinyurl.com/3c6rc6f8) Ollama (Link: https://www.ollama.com/) Open Web UI (Link: https://docs.openwebui.com/) Logseq and Obsidian (Link: https://tinyurl.com/yypmkrd2) LLaVA Model (Link: https://llava-vl.github.io/) Hookmark (Link: https://hookproductivity.com/) Host Links Guy on Nostr (Link: http://tinyurl.com/2xc96ney) Guy on X (Link: https://twitter.com/theguyswann) Guy on Instagram (Link: https://www.instagram.com/theguyswann) Guy on TikTok (Link: https://www.tiktok.com/@theguyswann) Guy on YouTube (Link: https://www.youtube.com/@theguyswann) Bitcoin Audible on X (Link: https://twitter.com/BitcoinAudible) The Guy Swann Network Broadcast Room on Keet (Link: https://tinyurl.com/3na6v839) Check out our awesome sponsors! Fold: The best way to buy, use, and earn #Bitcoin on everything you do! Sats back on your debit card, gift cards, auto-buys, round-ups, you name it. Fold is the true bitcoiner's banking. Get 20K sats for FREE using referral code bitcoinaudible.com/fold Ready for best-in-class self custody? Get the Jade here and use discount code 'GUY' to get 10% off (Link: bitcoinaudible.com/jade) Trying to BUY BITCOIN? River, secure, trusted, bitcoin only, lightning enabled, simple. (Link: https://bitcoinaudible.com/river) Bitcoin Games! Get 10% off the best Bitcoin board game in the world, HODLUP! Or any of the other great games from the Free Market Kids! Use code GUY10 at checkout for 10% off your cart! (Link: https://www.freemarketkids.com/collections/games-1) Bitcoin Custodial Multisig Want to get into Bitcoin but not ready for self custody? Use custodial multisig for the best way to distribute trust across multiple institutions and even jurisdictions! Check...
Coming up in this episode * We put a hat on AI * The SecureBlue/ublue thing * The UNIX Wars part deux 0:00 Cold Open 1:49 Artificial Fedora 28:35 The ImmutaBlues 54:01 Feedback 55:20 Tane on Notes and Unix 59:28 Ian on Unix 1:02:33 Chris on Notes and Sync 1:10:22 A Quick Release Update 1:14:41 Next Time 1:18:03 Stinger The Video Version! (https://youtu.be/JdfWd_-BhgU) https://youtu.be/JdfWd_-BhgU Support us here! (https://www.patreon.com/linuxuserspace) https://www.patreon.com/linuxuserspace AI dons a hat
We're back from Austin, with interviews and stories to share. Plus, it's Gentoo week and we take our first look at Fedora 40.Sponsored By:Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices!Kolide: Kolide is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:
We asked, and you answered: Your top 5 Linux app essentials and post-install rituals. Plus, some news to better cope with "extreme file-system damage."Sponsored By:Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices!Kolide: Kolide is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Berlin with Brent: May Meetup — Brent is back in Berlin! Please join the Jupiter Broadcasting community for an evening together, and bring your friends!
https://www.beeper.com/faq#how-does-beeper-connect-to-encrypted-chat-networks-like-imessage-signal-whatsapp — La música de la entradilla es “If Pigs Could Sing”, de Rolemusic, y se distribuye con licencia CC-BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.es) Puedes enviarme tus comentarios a través de Mastodon: https://fedi.gvisoc.com/@gabriel
This was a fun one! We get to hear about how great hyphens are from Martin. Andrew has triggered an environmental impact study on Hemispheric Views Enterprises. We talk about old TV ad personalities and their catchphrases. Andrew is a ________ guy now! Please back up your data, folks! Did you know Martin was a pen? Quadruple-digit Penny Scam 00:00:00 Episode 097 (https://listen.hemisphericviews.com/097)
Coming up in this episode * Telemetry helps us all * Immutability blues * A correction or two * And more feedback
La aplicación citada para trabajar con Git en iOS es Working Copy: https://workingcopy.app/ — La música de la entradilla es “If Pigs Could Sing”, de Rolemusic, y se distribuye con licencia CC-BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.es) Puedes enviarme tus comentarios a través de los siguientes canales: * Puedes unirte al grupo de oyentes en Telegram en https://t.me/sobre_la_marcha * A través de Mastodon: https://fedi.gvisoc.com/@gabriel * A través de mensajes directos en Telegram (sólo mensajes de texto
Neste episódio do Diocast, falamos sobre algumas das grandes novidades no mundo Linux: conheça os problemas que ocorreram no lançamento do KDE Plasma 6 e por que eu recomendo que você não atualize para o KDE 6 antes de ouvir este programa! Falamos também sobre a chegada do Zorin OS 7.1 e muito mais, incluindo novidades que estão por vir com o GNOME 46. Após anos de desenvolvimento, o KDE Plasma 6 finalmente chegou e essa nova versão traz uma série de mudanças visuais e funcionais que o tornam mais moderno, eficiente e personalizável do que nunca. Nós já fizemos uma extensa cobertura das etapas de desenvolvimento e também da primeira versão estável. Mas, agora que ele foi finalmente lançado, estão começando a aparecer muitos relatos de problemas com quebra do ambiente e incompatibilidades, afinal, o que está acontecendo com o KDE Plasma 6? Uma distro muito querida no Brasil pegou seus fãs de surpresa ao lançar uma atualização que ninguém esperava! Estamos falando do Zorin OS 7.1 que já está disponível para download! Essa nova versão traz uma série de melhorias e novos recursos, tornando o Zorin OS ainda mais fácil de usar e mais acessível para todos. Além das atualizações de pacotes de sempre, o Zorin OS 7.1 traz novos recursos de acessibilidade, uma melhor integração com aplicativos do Windows, oferecendo sugestões e alternativas claras quando um usuário tentar instalar algum executável do Windows no sistema. E isso não é tudo, este lançamento também disponibiliza a versão Education do Zoris OS, com várias otimizações para estudantes e professores, como o Read Strip e o Logseq. --- ✅ StreamYard é um estúdio virtual que permite que você faça lives profissionais, interagindo com seus convidados e seu público nas principais redes sociais. ✅ Este episódio do Diocast conta com o apoio da Trybe! Você está ligado nas novidades sobre IA? Não? Então você precisa conhecer o Curso Inteligência Artificial na Prática 2.0 da Trybe! Aprenda de uma vez por todas como usar IA no seu trabalho para se destacar da concorrência, afinal, demanda por profissionais com habilidades em IA tá crescendo muito rapido! Aumente sua produtividade, trabalhando com documentos, análise de dados e criando apresentações fantásticas em menos tempo! Use a IA para ter mais insights e fundamentar suas decisões! No Curso Inteligência Artificial na Prática 2.0 da Trybe você vai colocar a mão na massa, são mais de 17 horas de conteúdo e exercícios práticos para você aprender de verdade! Além de ter acesso a: Certificado de conclusão e a uma comunidade exclusiva de pessoas engajadas em compartilhar conhecimento! Aprenda com os melhores: Professores especialistas em IA que vão te guir nessa jornada! E tem mais, acesse quando e onde quiser este curso - ele é 100% online e flexível! E Para você que faz parte da nossa comunidade pinguim, basta usar o cupom DIOLINUX40 para ganhar 40% de desconto na sua inscrição! Tá esperando o quê? Inscreva-se agora no Curso Inteligência Artificial na Prática 2.0 da Trybe! --- Deixe seu comentário no post do episódio para ser lido no próximo programa. https://diolinux.com.br/podcast/nao-atualize-para-o-kde-6-ainda.html --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/diolinux/message
Primer episodio de una serie acerca de la Gestión del Conocimiento Personal (PKM - Personal Knowledge Management) y Logseq. Usaré Obsidian en algunos casos, como este episodio, para establecer una comparación con una referencia conocida. Pero, al ser soluciones tan distintas, intentaré hacerlo lo menos posible. Enlaces: https://logseq.com https://obsidian.md —La música de la entradilla es “If Pigs Could Sing”, de Rolemusic, y se distribuye con licencia CC-BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.es) Puedes enviarme tus comentarios a través de los siguientes canales: Puedes unirte al grupo de oyentes en Telegram en https://t.me/sobre_la_marcha A través de Mastodon: https://fedi.gvisoc.com/@gabriel A través de mensajes directos en Telegram (sólo mensajes de texto
En este episodio analizo: Roam Research. Obsidian. Logseq. Noteplan.
Cuento las herramientas que seguiré utilizando en 2024, las que quiero probar 2024 y las alternativas que quiero buscar en 2024. Canales de Telegram de pago Aprende Linux 15€ al año, Mas info https://t.me/UnDiaUnaAplicacion/9441/13413 Aplicaciones Typora https://typora.io/ Logseq https://logseq.com/ Morgen https://www.morgen.so/ Superproductivity https://super-productivity.com/ Tabby https://tabby.sh/ Rio https://raphamorim.io/rio/es/ Fzf-Nova https://github.com/gotbletu/fzf-nova Python-kanban https://github.com/Zaloog/kanban-python CuerdOS https://cuerdos.github.io Astro https://astro.build/ Micro https://micro-editor.github.io/ O https://github.com/xyproto/orbiton Twitter https://twitter.com/Tomando_Un_Cafe Correo tomandouncafe@ntec.eu
In Episode 194, Greg and Pam discuss business meetings, cats, and being thankful. Many thanks to Lindsay of Polymorph Dyeworks for the episode introduction! We would love to have YOU record and introduction to the show! You can find details in the Ravelry Group Pages or on our website here. Check out our group on Facebook! We would love to have you join us there. Our Community Zoom call (open to all listeners!) will be held on Saturday, January 6, 2024 at 12pm Eastern time. A Zoom link will be shared closer to the date. GIVEAWAY: We are giving away a copy of the book Knitting the National Parks by Nancy Bates! Enter to win using our Google Form. SUPPORT THE SHOW KnitPicks & Crochet.com We are KnitPicks and Crochet.com (owned by KnitPicks) Affiliates! This means if you are going to shop at KnitPicks or Crochet.com, and start by clicking their names, the Unraveling Podcast will get a small commission at no extra cost to you! It's an easy way to support the podcast passively. (Note: links to specific yarns or products will appear like https://shrsl.com/3xzh0. These are correct and are custom links to track our account. They are safe!) Patreon You can financially support Unraveling…a knitting podcast on Patreon! Monthly membership levels are available at Swatch ($1), Shawl ($3), and Sweater ($6) and come with rewards like early access to book club episodes, access to a quarterly Zoom call, discounts on all Knitting Daddy patterns, and holiday cards. Everything available via Patreon is extra, the show remains unchanged and free. Financial support through Patreon helps us cover expenses like web hosting, prize shipping, and equipment upgrades. NOTES Greg's Projects Greg finished a Yarn Cozy Lite (Knit) by Knitty Natty. Check out his project page. Greg started and finished pair of socks in the “Love is Love” colorway from Knitcircus yarn. Check out his project page. Greg stated a pair of socks in the “Northern Lights” colorway from Bad Sheep Yarn. Check out his project page. Pam's Project Pam worked on the Terrazzo Afghan by Tinna Thórudóttir. She is using using KnitPicks Chroma Worsted and Plymouth Yarn Encore Worsted. Tinna has good tutorials on her YouTube channel. Pam worked on Blackjack by Romi Hill. She is using Windy Valley Muskox 100% Quiviut. Pam worked on the Love Note sweater by Tin Can Knits. She is using yarn from Iria Yarn Co. (not currently dyeing) and The Fibre Studio at Yarns to Dye For. Pam started Fish Lips Kiss Heel socks for herself. She is using Plymouth Dye for Me Happy Feet undyed and East Coast Yarns in Charlie Brown Christmas. Pam also started The eM. Hat with Berroco Comfort. Book Club We announced the next book club book! We will be reading The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History by Kassia St. Clair. Share how you are will enjoy the book on social media with #UnravelingBookClub. Book Review: Knitting California Pam and Greg reviewed Knitting California by Nancy Bates. It was provided by the publisher Weldon Owen. We loved it. Miscellaneous Pam mentioned knitting at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema. Greg talked about taking the Amtrak train to Raleigh for the Annual Podcast Business Meeting prior to going to Florida for the ArchConf software architecture conference. We mentioned Ann Tudor and her stitch markers. We mentioned the Monterey Bay Aquarium webcams. Pam mentioned the Apple TV show For All Mankind. Greg mentioned Calibre and Logseq. Be sure to enter your Fairs and Festivals entry in the Fairs and Festivals KAL! Greg is a Snack Shack Sponsor in the Down Cellar Studio Pigskin Party '23. Greg can also be found talking about knitting and playing Dungeons & Dragons at Crits and Knits. Affiliate Link Disclousure We are a KnitPicks Affiliate! This means that if you click on a KnitPicks link or Crochet.com, or the banner ad and make a purchase, we will receive a commission at no extra cost to you. This post contains affiliate links. That means that if you click on a link to Amazon and subsequently make a purchase, we'll receive a small commission from the sale. You pay the same, and the commissions will help cover our podcasting expenses. Our opinions are always our own. Find us all over the Internet Patreon: Unraveling…a knitting podcast Subscribe in iTunes: The Unraveling Podcast Podcast RSS Feed: Unraveling Podcast Facebook: Unraveling Podcast Instagram: @UnravelingPodcast Ravelry Group: Unraveling Podcast Greg is KnittingDaddy on Ravelry, @KnittingDaddy on Instagram, and also writes the KnittingDaddy blog. Pam is pammaher on Ravelry and @pammaher on Instagram
We test two popular methods to run local language models on your Linux box. Then, we push the limits to see which language models will toe the line and which won't.
Ramses is a lifelong learner and knowledge enthusiast. Formerly an educator, Ramses has harnessed the power of rapid learning and adaptability to navigate two significant career transitions over his 8-year journey - from teacher to marketer to community manager. Now he writes about learning, teaching, Stoicism, and finding your online tribe as well as PKM in Logseq.In this podcast you will learn:How to break a skill into it's parts and learn themWhy most school learning and online courses are designed poorlyThe importance of prioritizing mindset and methods over tools in PKMMY FREE ONLINE COURSES:
【每週四 & 每周一更新】 本集重點 新單元 " 10 Minutes English with Philip" 每週星期一 作夢 小傑 x 鯨魚島 x 獵人執照 鳳梨酥 拿起來了 又放回去了 連續 30 天的 100 下扶地體身 肌束顫動 ( Logseq 日記軟體) 不好意思 這周錄的太急 忘記在影片中回覆留言 我下次一定記得 謝謝"Sumpara"上一周的留言
Stephen Wolfram answers questions from his viewers about business, innovation, and managing life as part of an unscripted livestream series, also available on YouTube here: https://wolfr.am/youtube-sw-business-qa Questions include: Is it worth moving to the USA from the UK/Europe to pursue a career in science, mathematics or engineering? What if one wants to change the world? - How long should one wait after college to start some startup in an area of their interest/expertise? - When you are thinking deeply about a problem, do you think "on paper" or on a computer or a tablet or...? Do you find one of them to be better than the others? - Can you tell a couple "stamp-licking" stories from the early days of starting Mathematica/Wolfram Research? - What are your thoughts on crypto and blockchain from a business perspective in general? - What do you think have been some of the most interesting and hard questions you've been asked here and elsewhere? - Can ChatGPT increase productivity? Is outsourcing writing skills beneficial or damaging? - "AI did my homework" is the inverse of "the dog ate my homework." You don't want to be in either situation! - Visual AI can produce amazing inspirations for jewelry and that sort of intricate art. - Do you drink caffeine sources like tea or coffee? How many per day? - What practices do you use to gauge and cultivate meaningful accountability as an individual and as part of a collective? - What was your revenue plan and time-to-revenue when starting your company? - We know that you use a hierarchical knowledge organization (files in folders) but did you ever try to use a networked knowledge organization (e.g. Logseq, Roam Research, Mem.ai, etc)? Thoughts on the best way to organize knowledge? - Wolfram documentation is amazing because it's connected (related functions). - I think the knowledge graph thesis is to give people epistemological tools and make it visual. But epistemology isn't something people worry about all the time while writing daily notes. - Have you "driven" a Tesla in Full Self-Driving mode? It's out now for beta testing and it's magical. It's so, so good. Purely a vision + neural net implementation. - Do you enjoy collecting and organizing physical books? Libraries are endless fun!
Topics covered in this episode: Omnivore app Djangonaut.space Server-side hot reload Python in Excel Extras Joke Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training Python People Podcast Patreon Supporters Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org Show: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Tuesdays at 11am PT. Older video versions available there too. Michael #1: Omnivore app Omnivore is the free, open source, read-it-later app for serious readers. Distraction free. Privacy focused. Open source. Designed for knowledge workers and lifelong learners. Save articles, newsletters, and documents and read them later — focused and distraction free. Add notes and highlights. Organize your reading list the way you want and sync it across all your devices. Syncs with popular Personal Knowledge Management systems including Logseq and Obsidian Wait, what's Logseq? :) A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge management and collaboration. Kinda like Notion? Brian #2: Djangonaut.space “Where contributors launch” This is a group mentoring program where individuals will work self-paced in a semi-structured learning environment over the course of three months. Djangonauts are members of the community who wish to level up their current Django code contributions and potentially take on leadership roles in Django in the future. Michael #3: Server-side hot reload Thanks to Alex Riviere for some improvements Bill Mill suggests websockets and Adam Johnson points he built something like this for Django (sorta) with django-browser-reload To make it work just: Include this script in your web projects for dev-time auto reloading of web browser when any change is detected in content. Works across all web technologies, built out on a FastAPI / Tailwind project. General workflow looks like: Edit the source CSS file Tailwind watcher generates a built CSS file Built CSS file is included the Python web HTML template Template appends a hash ID for the state of the CSS file Changes to the source CSS thus trigger a change in the final ID New ID means the page contents change and the script does a reload Even works for static resources if you put a “version” indicator on them: [HTML_REMOVED] [HTML_REMOVED] Brian #4: Python in Excel Anaconda working with Microsoft to have Python built in to Excel. “Python in Excel is currently in preview and is subject to change based on feedback. To use this feature, join the Microsoft 365 Insider Program and choose the Beta Channel Insider level.” from Microsoft Support article: Getting started with Python in Excel Extras Brian: Working on videos for “Ch3 : pytest Fixtures” for the Python Testing with pytest Course Bundle Adding some drawings and some more bonus videos. Thanks to everyone who's signed up already. I've pushed the 20% discount out till the end of August. I also finally listed it on pythontest.com/courses Also lots of new interviews for pythonpeople.fm, and I'm expecting at least one new episode of testandcode.com this week. It's going to be a busy week. Michael: PyCon Sweden CFP is open Be on Talk Python around Mobile Apps? Joke: The Password Game KennyLog-in.com - secure password generator
In der Folge 108 des Keep Calm & Learn On Podcasts spreche ich mit Oli und Tobias über unsere Eindrücke von der lernOS Convention 2023. Eigentlich hatten die beiden ihre Episode an einer Vernetzungsinsel auf der Veranstaltung aufgenommen. Dann habe ich aber die SD-Karte mit der Aufnahme verloren :-( Daher haben wir die Chance genutzt und die Episode einfach gemeinsam nochmal aufgenommen. Shownotes: Was ist eigentlich lernOS? lernOS unter Creative Commons Lizenz (wie Open Source Lizenzen, aber für Inhalte, nicht Software-Code) Wie funktionioniert das Lernen mit einem lernOS Leitfaden? Lernziele, Lerntandems, Lerngruppen, Lern-Sprints, Katas, Dojos & Co. (s.a. Lernen in Gruppen) Kaiserburg Nürnberg als Lokation, 4k-Modell (21st Century Skills, Deeper Learning) Die Ideale Größe für Learning Circle (LeanIn Circles, WOL Circles, Lerngruppen im Management 2.0 MOOC, Learning Circle Experiences bei Conti, SAP, DATEV, s.a. ENC181 Podcast dazu) Das hybride Konzept der lernOS Convention (von Slack Huddles zu Discord, Audio-only Barcamp, Mumble im CCC, Remo, Workadventure, KI-Netzwerk LIAON auf Discord, Simultanübersetzung, Speaker/Session Owner vor Ort und Remote, loscon22 “perfectly hybrid”) Onboarding von Noobs in der Community (losconCircles, Engelsystem beim Chaos Communication Congress, Chaospat:innen, s.a spiegel.de Artikel, Vernetzungsinseln mit Podcast-Studio mit Zoom PodTrack P4 und Rodecaster Pro, 2nd-Screen-Ansatz) loscon23 Highlights (“Wenn jemand Mindset sagt, stirb irgendwo ein kleines Kätzchen”, “Selbstorganisation braucht Regeln” in Session Mindset, Skillset, Toolset … and Frameset? How organisational framework conditions influence working and learning, Liberating Structures, Session zum neuen lernOS Zettelkasten Leitfaden, Zettelkasten von Luhmann, Logseq, Obsidian, Onenote, Frameset Ursprung im Benchlearning Projekt, Stimmung und Energie auf der loscon23) Gamification mit Minecraft, Minetest und Voxelspielen (Minetest, Totschlagargument “Wir sind hier bei der Arbeit, hier wird nicht gespielt”, Lego Serious Play, loscon21 Crafting Challenge “lernOS Freizeitpark”, Minetest Bildungsnetzwerk, SAVE THE DATE: loscon24 am 2./3. Juli 2024 in Nürnberg und Online
Dario is a generalist, with diverse experience across multiple industries, including civil engineering, management consulting, education and non-profit organisations. As someone with ADHD, one thing has been consistent—he's always felt burdened by the constant low-level chaos in his mind, and has struggled to stay on top of different streams of information. Then he discovered Logseq. He started the OneStutteringMind YouTube channel with the hopes of sharing some of the tips and tricks which help me manage the chaos in my mind.In this podcast you will learn:How PKM is a practice in self awarenessHow to navigate PKM with ADHDHow Dario uses Logseq to supercharge his lifeMY FREE ONLINE COURSES:
Volvemos con un nuevo episodio con varios temas, comento mi experiencia con Fedora 38 como lo he instalado, gestión de disco y mi valoración, comento Girok una herramienta para terminal de calendarios. Otra herramienta que estoy utilizando es Zoxide que es una alternativa al comando cd. Llevo usando logseq una meses y cuento mi evolución, como sincronizo y el uso de la páginas. Por último comento mi participación en la Akademy 2023 que se celebra en Málaga el 9 y 10 de Junio. Girok https://github.com/noisrucer/girok Zoxide https://github.com/ajeetdsouza/zoxide Logseq https://logseq.com/ Grive 2 https://github.com/vitalif/grive2 Akademy 2023 https://www.kde-espana.org/akademy-es-2023 Audio curso Aprendiendo Telegram https://mumbler.io/aprendiendo-telegram Twitter https://twitter.com/Tomando_Un_Cafe Correo tomandouncafe@ntec.eu RSS Tomando Un Café Anchor.fm http://anchor.fm/s/18c0860/podcast/rss Ivoox https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-tomando-un-cafe_sq_f1483612_1.html
Why Fedora 38 might Sway you to try it; and how it runs on the MacBook M1 Max.
We surprise each other with three secret topics, with one big catch.
We try out the most secure messaging app in the world, and Wes' new note system that's so great you'll want to abandon your current one.
https://weekly52.de/weekly/310 . Heute plaudern wir mit Dirk Primbs über seinen kurzweiligen Fotomenschen-Podcast, picken uns ein paar Storys aus seinem neuen 30x Fotogeschichte(n) Buch und reden über die Quantensprünge in der Fotografie. Wir geben Tipps für deine Webseite und Podcasts und in den Outtakes geht es ums Beissen, Saugen, um Bokeh-Fetischisten und Infrarot-Aufnahmen. Viel Spaß :-). Kapitelmarken mit Links zum Podcast (00:00) Wer ist Dirk Primbs? (04:00) Mit dem Anerzählt Podcast fing es an --> https://anerzaehlt.net/ (10:30) Wie läuft die Recherche zu den Fotogeschichten? (15:00) Oskar Barnack und die Leica-Welt in Wetzlar (20:00) Bildausschnitt und Wirkung: Napalm Girl und Che Guevara (27:30) Dirks Lieblingsbilder von Ed Curtis und Margaret Bourke-White (36:00) Abbey Road, Hindenburg, Afghan Girl und Tank Man (40:00) Die Erfindung der künstlerischen Fotografie und die Technik (47:30) Fake, Fakten und Fiktionen – The Book of Veles von Jonas Bendiksen (56:00) Quantensprünge in der Fotografie: Leica, Kodak und Polaroid (1:06:00) Kriminal- und Spionagefotografie und das Bild im Auge des Mordopfers (1:13:00) Deutsche Fotograf*Innen und Helmut Newton (1:15:00) Kurationen und Sammlungen in der Podcast Suchmaschine fyyd (1:26:30) Hintergründe zum Buch-Cover (1:31:30) Tipps zur Namengebung für Podcasts und Webseiten (1:35:00) Outtakes: Beissen, Saugen, Bokeh-Fetischisten und Infrarot-Aufnahmen (1:41:30) Ideen rund um Logseq . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47126Ob4k3h3hyr5r5wxobfpw24wfLcg7s5np7f
Año que empieza y una nueva oportunidad para adquirir nuevas habilidades y hábitos. Puede que este 2022 te hayas empezado a relacionar con Bitcoin y que te apetezca subir tu nivel de conocimiento. En este podcast te propongo 12 ideas Bitcoin para tus propósitos de 2023. Ideas de todo tipo para que en el nuevo año pases a la acción con la invención de Satoshi. Escúchame en Fountain aquí https://bit.ly/Fountain_Lunaticoin Más información en mi BLOG https://bit.ly/LunaticoinBLOG Twitter: https://twitter.com/lunaticoin Contenido adicional en mi Patreon https://bit.ly/Patreon_Luna Mención especial a los sponsors de este podcast: Compra bitcoin sin KYC en HodlHodl: https://bit.ly/hodlhodl-luna Cómo comprar en HodlHodl: https://bit.ly/ComoComprarHodlHodl Infórmate sobre Minería en Braiins: https://bit.ly/Braiins_Luna Vive con cripto en Bitrefill: https://bit.ly/Bitrefill_Luna Toma prestado con bitcoin en http://bit.ly/Lend_Lunaticoin Resoluciones y su minutaje: 00:00:00 Introducción 00:02:24 1. Romper el hielo con Bitcoin 00:06:39 2. Practicar Wallets Bitcoin 00:10:57 3. Diario con Notion o Logseq 00:15:03 4. Comunidades Bitcoin locales 00:19:11 5. Plan de ahorro duro 00:22:22 6. Utilizar Nostr 00:25:06 7 Dominar pasar de Onchain a Lightning 00:27:45 8. Practicar Valor por Valor 00:31:31 9. Nodo Bitcoin 00:36:38 10. Aprender Sparrow Wallet 00:38:34 11. Montar un SeedSigner 00:40:20 12. Mejorar tu privacidad en Internet 00:44:57 Despedida 2022 LINKS mencionados en el podcast: https://bit.ly/L173_Links
今回はSatoshi Murataさんから頂きましたお便りにお答えする形で「何故TodoistとLogseqを併用するのか?」についてお話ししております。 ご意見ご感想お待ちしております! Beck's Hacks Radioでは皆様からのご意見ご感想等々いただけますと幸いです。Twitterのハッシュタグ#hacks_radioや、メール、Substackへのコメント/返信の形でも大丈夫です。 https://twitter.com/search?q=%23hacks_radio beck1240@gmail.com ----他のメディアもご購読もお願いします!---- Blog : Hacks for Creative Life! Podcast : Beck's Hacks Radio Youtube : HacksTV News Letter : Beck's Hacks Letter
※本動画は2022年5月に収録されており、実際にLogseqを使い始めて既に7ヶ月以上が経過しております点ご容赦下さい。 本動画の内容がまとまったブログ記事がありますのでこちらも是非ご一読頂けますと幸いです。 https://hacks.beck1240.com/dairy-memo-note/9664/ 今回はLogseqで行ったいるDaily Note運用について紹介しています。WorkflowyではなくLogseqが何故良かったかなど、ややマニアックな内容となっております。 00:00 オープニングトーク 02:44 LogseqとTodoistの連携が超イケてる 05:27 カレンダー取り込みとTweet投稿 07:34 ネタ帳とPKMはLogseqに移行するか? 09:57 今日のまとめ 12:18 エンディングトーク ご意見ご感想お待ちしております! Beck's Hacks Radioでは皆様からのご意見ご感想等々いただけますと幸いです。Twitterのハッシュタグ#hacks_radioや、メール、Substackへのコメント/返信の形でも大丈夫です。 https://twitter.com/search?q=%23hacks_radio beck1240@gmail.com ----他のメディアもご購読もお願いします!---- Blog : Hacks for Creative Life! Podcast : Beck's Hacks Radio Youtube : HacksTV News Letter : Beck's Hacks Letter
Hacker Public Radio New Years Eve Show 2021 - 2022 Part 4 Star Wars : The Bad Batch https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_The_Bad_Batch https://www.starwars.com/series/star-wars-the-bad-batch Star Wars Rebels https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars_Rebels https://www.starwars.com/series/star-wars-rebels Star Wars - The Clone Wars https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_The_Clone_Wars_(2008_TV_series) https://www.starwars.com/series/star-wars-the-clone-wars Star Wars - Book Of Boba Fett https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_of_Boba_Fett https://www.starwars.com/series/the-book-of-boba-fett Father Ted https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111958/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Father_Ted Gary Gygax - Creator of Dungeons & Dragons https://dungeons.fandom.com/wiki/Gary_Gygax https://www.wired.com/2008/03/dungeon-master-life-legacy-gary-gygax/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Gygax Tolkien, The Hobbit, Lord Of The Rings https://www.tolkiensociety.org/author/biography/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._R._R._Tolkien http://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/The_Hobbit http://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/Lord_of_the_rings The Wheel Of Times (Book series and TV show) https://stoneblackfiction.com/2020/07/26/book-review-the-wheel-of-time-a-complete-series-review/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wheel_of_Time https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7462410/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wheel_of_Time_(TV_series) Good Omens TV Show https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1869454/ Colour Of Magic - TV & Book https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1869454/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Colour_of_Magic https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1079959/ Star Labs - UK Linux friendly PC reseller https://us.starlabs.systems/ Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition https://www.engadget.com/dells-xps-13-plus-developer-edition-is-the-first-laptop-certified-for-ubuntu-2204-lts-082022945.html Juno Is A Roman Goddess https://mythopedia.com/topics/juno Juno Computers - UK/ USA - more Linux PCs for sale https://junocomputers.com/uk/ Juno Is Also a Moon of Jupiter https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moons_of_Jupiter Tuxedo Computers - German Linux PC Reseller https://www.tuxedocomputers.com/ Arthur C Clarke's three laws - Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke%27s_three_laws Axe of The Dwarvish Lords - Dungeons & Dragons Axe That Turns Wielder Into a Dwarf http://dnd5e.wikidot.com/wondrous-items:axe-of-the-dwarvish-lords Fire Sign Theater https://wfmu.org/playlists/FT https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Firesign_Theatre https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Write_Yourself_a_Scheme_in_48_Hours Magic The Gathering https://magic.wizards.com/en (in reference to Jim Butcher, the Dresden Files series): Joe, Wikipedia now says that there are to be 22 books followed by a "big apocalyptic trilogy" [22:28:36] (Channel) Moss: https://deadline.com/2018/10/the-dresden-files-fantasy-novels-optioned-fox21-tv-studios-series-development-1202476632/ Lively discussion of speculative fiction and worldbuilding - RIP Terry Pratchett https://jerryjenkins.com/worldbuilding/ https://writersedit.com/fiction-writing/the-ultimate-guide-to-world-building-how-to-write-fantasy-sci-fi-and-real-life-worlds/ https://www.reddit.com/r/worldbuilding/ Discussed a current creative project of Ken Fallon at length - discussed the importance of using FOSS for longevity of creative projects to avoid getting locked out by proprietary file formats. Ken uses paper + Google Docs... reminded of the Google Graveyard : Google Graveyard - https://killedbygoogle.com/ Game Of Thrones Books https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Song_of_Ice_and_Fire Considerations for storytelling : The Writer's Journey - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Writer%27s_Journey:_Mythic_Structure_for_Writers The Seven Basic Plots - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seven_Basic_Plots The Hero's Journey - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hero%27s_journey Also, not enough people draw upon the 100 Year's War or Italian city-states period for inspiration - which is the secret sauce for Game of Thrones Linked notes, for building webs of information. Crossplaftorm, Linux, Mac, Windows Should try worldbuilding with FOSS : Spotiflyer on F-Droid https://f-droid.org/packages/com.shabinder.spotiflyer/ Youtube-DL https://youtube-dl.org/ Mailspring https://getmailspring.com/ Obsdian - https://obsidian.md/ Logseq - https://logseq.com/ Zettlr - https://www.zettlr.com/download Writing : Libre Office - https://www.libreoffice.org/ Art : GIMP - https://www.gimp.org/ Krita - https://krita.org/en/ Good Evernote alternative : Joplin - https://joplinapp.org Glimpse - failed politically motivated GIMP fork - https://news.itsfoss.com/glimpse-gimp-fork-archived/ The current favourite Audacity alternative - https://tenacityaudio.org/ Youtube Removes Dislikes https://techcrunch.com/2021/11/10/youtube-is-removing-the-dislike-count-on-all-videos-across-its-platform/ https://www.premiumbeat.com/blog/youtube-removes-dislike-count/ If Terry Pratchett wrote 42 books, the universe would explode https://www.terrypratchettbooks.com/ Terry Goodkind - Sword of Truth - don't go past the second book https://www.terrygoodkind.com/ Orson Scott Card Offical Website http://www.hatrack.com/ Orson Scott Card Interview With WIred Magazine - Ender's Game https://www.wired.com/2013/10/cardqa/ Ender's Game as well - don't go past the second book Ender's Shadow https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ender%27s_Shadow Alvin Maker https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tales_of_Alvin_Maker Lost Gate, Gate Thief, and Gatefather - part of Mither Mages trilogy by Orson Scott Card https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lost_Gate https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gate_Thief Artemis Fowl https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemis_Fowl Cadfael Chronicles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cadfael_Chronicles The Hunger Games https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunger_Games https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1392170/ (movie) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunger_Games_(film) https://www.lionsgate.com/franchises/the-hunger-games https://brantsteele.net/hungergames/disclaimer.php - The Hunger Games Simulator Twilight is garbage? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twilight_(novel_series) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1099212/ https://www.reddit.com/r/twilight/comments/gq7uil/why_does_everyone_think_twilight_is_so_bad_a_rant/ - thoughts from Reddit https://www.cinemablend.com/news/2570595/the-twilight-books-vs-movies-major-differences-from-stephenie-meyers-novels-and-the-films (How the books and movies differ) Jar Jar Binks is a Sith Lord aka The Darth Jar Theory theory goes that by prolonging the Clone Wars and helping Doku escape, he enabled the Empire to continue. Also, Palpatine was helped into power by his machinations. https://insidethemagic.net/2021/10/jar-jar-binks-sith-al1/ https://screenrant.com/star-wars-details-prove-darth-jar-jar-theory/ https://swfanon.fandom.com/wiki/Darth_Jar_Jar_(Beethoven4ever) https://www.cbr.com/star-wars-darth-jar-jar-theories-benefit-hated-character/ Star Wars Droids https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Star_Wars:_Droids:_The_Adventures_of_R2-D2_and_C-3PO https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088510/ https://youtu.be/ygr8wsqrhtI Star Wars Holiday Special https://www.starwarsholidayspecial.com/ https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0193524/ https://youtu.be/6hH8rxarVG8 Yuuzhan Vong https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Yuuzhan_Vong Chiss https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Chiss/Legends Joker (movie) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7286456/ Also Heath Ledger is the best Joker ever says Honkey Magoo Star Wars - The First Order https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/First_Order Jedi Praxeum aka Jedi School https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Jedi_Praxeum Marvel Multiverse https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiverse_(Marvel_Comics) The Simpsons https://simpsons.fandom.com/wiki/Simpsons_Wiki The Simpsons Predictions https://www.joe.co.uk/entertainment/the-definitive-list-of-everything-the-simpsons-predicted-that-shockingly-came-true-305627 https://collider.com/predictions-the-simpsons-came-true/ South Park https://southpark.cc.com/ Dick Van Dyke Show https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054533/ https://www.metv.com/shows/the-dick-van-dyke-show https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1960s/dick-van-dyke-show/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dick_Van_Dyke_Show Mary Tyler Moore Show https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065314/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mary_Tyler_Moore_Show https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1970s/mary-tyler-moore-show/ Bewitched https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057733/ https://tubitv.com/series/300006608/bewitched https://nostalgiacentral.com/?s=bewitched https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1960s/bewitched-2/ McHale's Navy https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0055689/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McHale%27s_Navy https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1960s/mchales-navy/ F Troop https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058800/ https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1960s/f-troop/ Hogan's Heroes https://hogansheroes.fandom.com/wiki/Hogan%27s_Heroes https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058812/ https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1960s/hogans-heroes/ Phil Silver's Show https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047763/ https://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1950s/phil-silvers-show/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Phil_Silvers_Show Sgt. Bilko (movie with Steve Martin) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117608/ Adam Sandler https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001191/ Brooklyn 99 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2467372/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklyn_Nine-Nine Idiocracy https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/ https://archive.org/details/Idiocracy_201507 Blazing Saddles https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071230/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blazing_Saddles https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-features/mel-brooks-why-blazing-saddles-is-the-funniest-movie-ever-made-252004/ Young Frankenstein https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072431/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Frankenstein https://www.cinemablend.com/news/2573686/young-frankenstein-behind-the-scenes-facts-about-the-mel-brooks-movie Silent Movie https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075222/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Movie High Anxiety https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0076141/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Anxiety Spaceballs https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094012/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaceballs Robin Hood : Men In Tights https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107977/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood:_Men_in_Tights Robin Hood Prince Of Thieves https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102798/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood:_Prince_of_Thieves Princess Bride https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093779/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Princess_Bride_(film) Mawg (Spaceballs) https://spaceballs.fandom.com/wiki/Barf
Wir haben beide iOS 16 installiert und besprechen unsere Lieblingsfeatures, Jan nutzt Reminders und wir haben beide die Opal C1 Webcam gekauft und besprechen unsere Erfahrung damit. Nach einem kleinen Ausflug zu Signal, Obsidian und Logseq sprechen wir über den neuartigen Browser Arc.
IN THIS EPISODE, YOU'LL LEARN:13:57 - The different levels of attention and focus and how to harness the one you need at any given time.27:57 - Frameworks that connect information into meaningful patterns to build deep knowledge and insight.33:23 - Why the best investors are masters of synthesizing these principles and leveraging information productivity.41:08 - How to ensure the information you consume is serving you best.1:04:27 - Which industries Ross believes will generate the billionaires of the future.1:11:50 - The current state of Artificial Intelligence.And a whole lot more!*Disclaimer: Slight timestamp discrepancies may occur due to podcast platform differences.BOOKS AND RESOURCESRoss Dawson's Website.Thriving on Overload Book.Readwise for engaging with your reading.Hypothesis tool for annotation.Zapier for transferring information.Roam research for capturing information.Logseq for more detail.Notion for highly structured notes via web clippings.Airtable for organizing.Trey Lockerbie Twitter.NEW TO THE SHOW?Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs.Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here.Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool.Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services.P.S The Investor's Podcast Network is excited to launch a subreddit devoted to our fans in discussing financial markets, stock picks, questions for our hosts, and much more! Join our subreddit r/TheInvestorsPodcast today!SPONSORSHelp empower girls to break free through education, healthcare, child protection, and other wonderful benefits by being a World Vision child sponsor today.Make summer dinners stress-free with Freshly. Get $125 off your first five orders today!Take the next step in your working-life or get ready for a change, by being a Snooze franchise partner.Enjoy 50% off Remote's full suite of global employment solutions for your first employee for three months when you use promo code WSB.Invest in high quality, cash flowing real estate without all of the hassle with Passive Investing.Confidently take control of your online world without worrying about viruses, phishing attacks, ransomware, hacking attempts, and other cybercrimes with Avast One.Send, spend, and receive money around the world easily with Wise.Book your next simple tour or extreme adventure through Viator, the world's leading travel experience marketplace. Use code VIATOR10 for a 10% off your first booking.Get up to 3% Daily Cash back on everything you buy with Apple Card. Apply now in the Wallet app on iPhone and start using it right away. Subject to credit approval. Daily cash is available via an Apple Cash card or as a statement credit. See Apple Card customer agreement for terms and conditions. Apple Cash card is issued by Green Dot Bank, Member FDIC. Variable APRs range from 13.24% to 24.24% based on creditworthiness. Rates as of August 1, 2022.Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors.HELP US OUT!Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
A renaissance is happening in productivity tools—and that goes beyond the software itself and into online gathering places for users passionate about those tools. Ramses is the community manager for Logseq, and he joins Mark and Adam to discuss language learning communities and the great flashcard debate; platform options like Discord, Discourse, and Circle; why people join communities in the first place, and why they stick around in the longer term. Plus: why community is not a moat. @MuseAppHQ hello@museapp.com Show notes Ramses Oudt (@rroudt) Think Stack Club Spaced repetition Flashcard Duolingo, Anki Outliner Logseq, Emacs, Workflowy, Dynalist, Roam Research, Obsidian Knowledge graph Readwise r/puppy101 Logseq's forum, Craft's community Discourse, Circle Loom Logseq’s Github
Array Cast - August 5, 2022 Show NotesMany thanks to Bob Therriault, João Araújo and Rodrigo Girão Serrão for gathering these links:[01] 00:01:40 J wiki features https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWqixYyb52Q[02] 00:02:31 J promo video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxibe2QOA0s[03] 00:03:00 British APL Association https://britishaplassociation.org/ Vector https://vector.org.uk/[04] 00:03:27 Conor's Twin Algorithms presentation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiferfBvN3s[05] 00:08:13 Numpy https://numpy.org/ JAX https://jax.readthedocs.io/en/latest/notebooks/quickstart.html Julia https://julialang.org/[06] 00:08:49 João's array Google search engine https://cse.google.com/cse?cx=e5ff9c06c246f4ca5[07] 00:09:00 João's Iverson mirror site https://joaogui1.github.io/keiapl/ Original link http://keiapl.org/[08] 00:11:55 João's website https://joaogui1.netlify.app/[09] 00:13:10 BQN https://mlochbaum.github.io/BQN/ Dyalog APL https://www.dyalog.com/ J https://www.jsoftware.com/indexno.html[10] 00:13:50 Vannevar Bush https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vannevar_Bush Alan Kay https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Kay[11] 00:14:13 Tool for Thought Rocks https://lu.ma/toolsforthoughtrockshttps://www.youtube.com/c/ToolsforThoughtRocks?app=desktop[12] 00:14:40 Obsidian discord https://discord.com/invite/veuWUTm[13] 00:15:10 Roam https://roamresearch.com/ Obsidian https://obsidian.md/ Logseq https://logseq.com/[14] 00:17:01 Anki https://logseq.com/ Muse https://museapp.com/[15] 00:18:25 Notion https://www.notion.so/ Remnote https://www.remnote.com/[16] 00:19:42 Marshall's BQN Markdown https://github.com/mlochbaum/BQN/blob/master/md.bqn[17] 00:22:06 Perlis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Perlis[18] 00:22:49 Array Thinking https://www.arraycast.com/episodes/episode-00-why-i-like-array-languages[19] 00:24:50 Folds https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fold_(higher-order_function)[20] 00:25:51 Rank concept https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Function_rank[22] 00:26:57 Short Term Memory https://www.simplypsychology.org/short-term-memory.html[23] 00:27:42 APL glyphs https://aplwiki.com/wiki/Typing_glyphs#By_method[24] 00:28:59 Stefan Kruger 'Learn APL' https://xpqz.github.io/learnapl/intro.html Rodrigo Girão Serrão 'Mastering Dyalog APL' https://mastering.dyalog.com/README.html[25] 00:29:35 Quarto https://quarto.org/[26] 00:32:33 Conor's original solution {≢∪⍵~0} Y[27] 00:32:40 Without APL ~ Without J -.[28] 00:32:50 BQN Without ¬∘∊/⊣[29] 00:33:55 Set Intersection APL X{⍺⌿⍨(≢⍵)≥⍵⍳⍺}Y Set Intersection J x (e. # [) y Set Union APL X{⍺⍪⍵⌿⍨(≢⍺)
All your questions about Muse, answered! Mark, Adam, and Wulf discuss the purposes of search in knowledge tools; the need for an infinite canvas file format; the many facets of board archival; and how to fund a research lab. Plus: the dangers of iPad use in a darkened plane cabin. @MuseAppHQ hello@museapp.com Show notes Prison Entrepreneurship Program national recidivism quasimode Storytelling episode of Metamuse Zoho Mail Yahoo's web directory in the 1990s The Science of Managing Our Digital Stuff Kinopio Hick's Law origin of “hyperlink” Linked cards sneak peek in Muse Paulo Pereira episode in Metamuse Sofware Longevity episode of Metamuse DevonThink, Craft, Notion, Roam, Obsidian, Logseq, Evernote mind palace Deeplinks in Muse FigJam, Miro, Freeform, tldraw, Goodnotes Zettelkasten, GTD Hillary Maloney episode of Metamuse text blocks in Muse Ink & Switch Automerge Panic definite optimism
In this mega episode, we welcome Eric Walker (Arcadia June 2022 winner) on the show for a special edition of Gaming Corner! Jason also shares his recent Internet horror story, Andrew is Mr. Logseq and Martin confuses him with a beloved American nursery rhyme. Arcadia June 2022 Winner: Eric Walker 00:00:00 Congrats to our Arcadia June 2022 winner!
Grey Mirror: MIT Media Lab’s Digital Currency Initiative on Technology, Society, and Ethics
In this episode, curator of the world's most extensive mind map Jerry Michalski joins us to talk about how we as a society can contribute to the public commons in a positive way and why we must. Jerry shares the mission behind his distinguished idea of creating a second brain! He has been working on this brain map for more than 24 years and has introduced almost 500 THOUSAND THOUGHTS in his brain and keeps it up! We dive deep into how he created this system that gives access to tons of knowledge collected and connected in context, the importance of having a deep curation and scaffolding process, several possible roles for AI in this procedure and why having shared common knowledge is crucial for a better and more just future for us all. “If we could slowly build arguments and add evidence we might govern better” Additionally Jerry shares why lesser accessed links tend to gradually clear out of google search, how to make spam disappear from the internet and all about his dislike about the word “consumer” and designing from trust. SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/rhyslindmark JOIN OUR DISCORD: https://discord.gg/PDAPkhNxrC Who is Jerry Michalski? Curator of The World's Largest Mind Map, Guide to the World in Context, Tech Visionary for 30+ Years, Keynote Speaker & Expert on Trust & Mistrust Jerry is working to curate collected shared memory through captivating ventures. Two to mention: https://openglobalmind.com/ and the world's largest brain published called Jerry's Brain. IF YOU WANT TO HELP BUILD THIS SHARED MEMORY SPACE! DIVE INTO JERRY'S LINKS! Topics: Welcome Jerry Michalski to The Rhys Show!: (00:00:00) What is Jerry's Brain and what exists in it: (00:01:22) Acknowledgement and connecting to a second brain: (00:03:29) About spaced repetition software and Jerry's thoughts on Anki: (00:07:42) What would public epistemic commons look like in 1950s: (00:11:00) The importance of a deep curation and scaffolding process: (00:15:29) Different possible roles for AI in curation and scaffolding process: (00:17:25) Why it is so hard to make spam disappear from the internet: (00:20:05) How Jerry thinks about trust: (00:29:42) Defining trust and how to make it abundant: (00:32:54) Traffic calming as an example of designing from trust: (00:36:34) Catalyzing moment in childhood about curiosity: (00:39:51) How to help Jerry in this SHARED MEMORY SPACE: (00:44:57) The importance of HARD FUN: (00:45:27) Mentioned resources: Duolingo: https://www.duolingo.com/ Anki: https://www.ankiapp.com/ Roamresearch: https://roamresearch.com/ Logseq: https://logseq.com/ GPT-3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPT-3 Hans Monderman: https://www.pps.org/article/hans-monderman Alice Miller: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Miller_(psychologist) Russell L. Ackoff: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_L._Ackoff Connect with Jerry Michalski: Design from trust: https://www.designfromtrust.com/ Web: https://www.jerrymichalski.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/jerrymichalski LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerrymichalski/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jerry.michalski Instagram Sociate: https://www.instagram.com/sociate Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/JerryMichalski
先ほど配信したメールにポッドキャスト音声が入っていなかったので再送です。ごめんなさい。iPad Workers Podcast第49回は「Logseqがデジタル時代の新しい日誌になる」というお話です。
iPad Workers Podcast第48回は「Logseqを使ったタスク管理術」についてのお話です。
Logseq Obsidian ほとんどのメモを「今日」のページで管理・記録するLogseqデイリー日誌術 - by goryugo LogseqとObsidianで一つのライブラリを共有して使う – ごりゅご.com ご意見、ご感想はTwitterのハッシュタグ#ごりゅごcastかお便りフォームにお送りください。
The Circles- product (incl integrations)- docs- content- community- UGCTALK ABOUT SVELTE SOCIETY STORYDimensions of the Circles- negative engineering? or dev exceptions- onboarding -> production -> prod-dev -> billing -?Other definitions of devx- single command do a lot -> until too magic- does what it says you would do- making some cycles faster -> esbuild 100x faster - bret victor inventing on principleFuture of Devx? integrate forward, or backward- content creation meta - video. shortgame + longgame.- backward -> going into docs, productListen to the DevX pod: https://devxpod.buzzsprout.com/1895030/10012425-the-radiating-circles-in-devx-with-swyx-head-of-developer-experience-temporalPauline: 0:00Hi, Shawn! Thank you so much for joining us for a DevX pod today. We're really excited to have you on board. I just wanted to point out this is one of those things where I tweeted about something and then someone was like, I recommend this person. And then I found you, so this is really exciting and we're going to have this awesome conversation about developer experience. Maybe for those who may not have heard of you before, can you give us a bit of an introduction on your story? What you're all about?Shawn: 0:31Yeah. Thanks for inviting me on. I'm Shawn also known as swyx online. I originally am from Singapore and, moved to the U S for college and pretty much the rest of my career and spent my first career in finance before changing careers to tech. And since I joined tech, I've been fairly known for learning in public, for speaking about reacts and serverless. And now I work as Head of Developer Experience at Temporal.Pauline: 0:55I have a follow-up question actually. What does it mean to be head of developer experience at Temporal?Shawn: 1:02It's a role that we basically, I created for myself because when they were reaching out to hire me, they didn't have something like that. And I don't think it's a common role at a startup as well. The bit of a background, which we can get into like how I got started into developer experience. I previously worked at Netlify where I originally joined as a developer advocate type person, but then when Sarah Drasner came along and started leading us as a VP she restructured the whole thing to make it more of a developer experience engineer. So I'm turning developer relations into something where you actually do a bit more engineering and are responsible for parts of the developer experience rather than talking about it. Then I continued that into AWS, whereas also a driver advocate for AWS Amplify. Well, I think for me, the role that I really thought would make the most sense to borrow was something that spans across docs and developer advocacy as well as community. And then I was also a product manager for our recent tax group STK. When you're in a smaller startup, you kind of have to wear many hats. And so, uh, this developer experience umbrella felt that the most descriptiveMike: 2:14I think you literally just covered the next two questions I wanted to go talk about. I wonder if you have any more details in terms of overall what DevX is to you?Shawn: 2:25Yeah. I've actually written some thoughts about this. I kind of think about it as a radiating circle out from the core product. And so part of this is influenced by me struggling with developer relations at Netlify and at AWS, because often there's a separate team that is responsible for docs. There's a separate team that's responsible for product. It's very hard actually, when you realize. A lot of the things that you do as a developer advocate is very it's downstream of everything else that's above you. And if they're shipped and organized by different teams, then you can get a very disjoint experience. Essentially like your impact as a developer advocate may not be as high because people don't see your stuff as much as they see the docs or the experience about it. So just think about it in terms of like, okay, you start with the core products, make sure that the product design and you get enough feedback. You make sure that API design is really solid. then you radiate out into the docs, which is your sort of first party content on how to use it. I consider docs secondary to products because the best doc's is the docs you don't have to read, right. That is intuitive experience, but still you need docs anyway. And then going out from the docs you need, you go into first party content, which is the role of a developer advocate. And that is anything that's ancillary to docs that explains the why instead of the, what or the how. But you can also dive into the what and the how as well. Like sometimes you just need to pitch the same thing, seven different ways before someone gets it. And then you go from the first party content, which is your blog posts and talks and stuff like that. It's very traditional DevRel fodder into community, which is going from one to many communication to many, to many communication. In other words, having a place where your users talk to other users and help each other out. And then the final tier is enabling third-party content, which is I think about it in terms of users writing blog posts and books, workshops and courses and tutorials about you, even posting jobs with your tool or your technology in the job description on anything like this, where it's very user initiated. I really like encouraging that because that's how you know that you start scaling developer experience beyond the sheer number of people that are working in your company because you have users working for you. But that only happens after you got all the core inner loop stuff right.Mike: 4:48I like the analogy with the radiator being in the middle and starting to do, send the heat out. I wonder, what's your take on in product developer experience, how do you make sure you don't have to ride this doc? Do you know that chapter in the documentation and how do you deal with that? Are you directly involved in the product to make certain changes that you think are more intuitive? Or how does that go?Shawn: 5:13Yeah, I think it depends on the maturity of the company. This role or this job changes very much depending on whether you're a seed stage or series B and maybe you're not a venture funded company, but depending on the maturity of the products, right? If the thing is mostly fully formed, then you have much less impact or possibility of changing things. But for me, I was directly involved in shaping every single part of the API that we shipped for the TypeScript and I wrote almost every single word of the docs. Very extremely involved! Because then after that it can flow from there to my DevRel efforts and community building efforts. So I think it really depends. The second thing it really depends on is how visual you are versus how much of a code base Platform you are. So we are very code based. In other words, we care much more about API design than user experience design or UI design. I think UI design for visual product makes sense. I think Gitpod probably more of a visual products because there's no Gitpod API. I mean, there's a config and there's no Gitpod API that I integrate into my app or anything like that. Netlify where I used to work as well. Yes, there's another Netlify config, but like the rest of the thing is just point and click. So in that sense, yes. The role of UI design, I think is very powerful. The last point I'll mentioned for you as well, is that another principle or API design principle that applies regardless of whether you're doing visual or programmatic SDK work, is that you want to try to enhance the power of a single command. So for us it was Netlify deploy or git commit, and that would create a whole new deploy preview. And that was a big revolution in front end development. There was other analogies in the CLI that we should, that we shift this well that I was involved in. But I always think about that in terms of like, okay, how do you increase the power of a single action and just pack as much as possible in there? I really liked that idea. I don't know if that is described as good developer experience, but to me, I think that really contributes to a wow moment that where you type a single command and something magical happens, because that would have typically taken many steps to accomplish.Mike: 7:27I think this is a great way to describe it. The other thing I like is when it does what you expect it to do, I think that's another huge one. You could have add whatever, but then, it does only half of the stuff or, yeah there's really good examples out there for sure. Nice.Shawn: 7:42There's a part of a developer experience, which I often talk about which is a developer exceptions. In other words, developer experience often we talk about happy paths. Like, oh, if you ask them, do I like this? Look at how amazing it is. Look at how awesome and how fast and how everything, how amazing everything is. But people in developer experience often don't talk about the, what happens when things go wrong and actually sometimes paying attention to giving you a nice remedial path when something goes wrong is actually also a really good experience that developer experience, which people don't talk. So improving observability, making sure that you don't have pricing mistakes or your pricing is predictable, at least. And doing things like having clear versioning and deprecation support policies, these all kind of boring and less headliner things that you want to ship, but it's actually very key for developer experience.Pauline: 8:35That's a really good point. You said having a wow moment and that I think is a really good explanation of what developer experience is. Why is it important to you that we have that wow moment? Why should we even care about developer experience? Why have that wow moment?Shawn: 8:54I think the wow moment is more of a marketing thing in the sense that there's a lot of developer tools out there and you need to stand out somehow and you need to get to that wow moment as quickly as possible because everyone has other things going on. They may click away if you don't get to that wow moment. so I think that's part of it. The other part, which is also like game design, in the sense that, you need to keep having rushes of endorphins to you, to make your job fun, to have the developers stay in flow and developers that stay in flow and more productive. As to why in general, should we even care about developer experience? I actually, yeah. There's a cynical view. And then there's a more genuine view. The one genuine view is that developer experience helps, developers be more productive, which helps ship more products and makes users happy and blah, blah, blah, develop a tooling companies are worth multiple billions of dollars. And if you can help a developer tools company improve the developer experience in whatever form, then that creates a lot of value for developers. That's the feel good, happy view. My secret problem with developer experiences that I don't think it's that important. Like it's, you're not curing cancer. You're not flying to Mars or anything like that. So I think it's intellectually, interesting and financially very rewarding career. But we should also be a bit humble about. Yeah. Like nobody wakes nobody else outside of developers cares about developing experience. We, they just care about, are you making the thing that helps me make the other thing go faster or ship faster, whatever. And that's it. All these other metrics around, like, I don't know, like number of people visiting your blog posts, like no one cares. So I'm very cynical about that sort of thing. OhMike: 10:45no, my analytics,Pauline: 10:49I was just going to say that's... That's probably the most refreshing take actually. Because I feel like a lot of other people have not mentioned it in that sort of way or describe developer experience in that way you are right.Shawn: 11:02Also, I wasn't interviewing there, I was talking with a very senior person at Cloudflare and, I told him this . And he was, I think he was like considering to hire me or whatever. And it wasn't an interview or anything, but I think I closed that door when I told him this, because he was like, what are you talking about? Developer Experience is everything. I'm like, dude, like, come on. Like, like developers are very pampered. Like we have like unlimited leave ,we have like six figure salaries. We're fine. Like, we don't, you don't have to pretend like this is the highest value thing in the world. But, I mean, it's still very valuable. It's just it's one of many possible things that smart people are. Oh, could you read it one more? Nice thing, which is that I think improving the developer experience for beginners is very important. Enables beginners to get started, to make the career, to, to transition their careers which is I'm a career changer myself. And if I did not have the help of people who focus so much on docs and community and, making things accessible to beginners, then I would not be here. I'm not against it. I'm just saying it's not, you know, there are also many other important things.Pauline: 12:09Absolutely. If you're like a doctor or a surgeon, or solving our pandemic . Yeah. No, thank you for that. A lot of our guests have said accessibility especially to begin as is why people should continue caring about developer experience and improving it and stuff like that. That's a good point.Shawn: 12:25Yes.Mike: 12:29No, no, I, I was, uh, I wanted to move on, but that's a good point. And it does make moving on a bit easier then on the previous note we talked about, so I think we talked about the commands that, you know, do a lot for you. What other kind of like excellent developer experience have you experienced or maybe build yourself or with the team that you can share about?Shawn: 12:49I feel like I should write this down because there's a number of nice develop experiences that stick in my head that I haven't really articulated very well. So in other words, single command doing multiple things that's good until the point that it becomes too magic and then that's bad. We've established that already. Another one that I really like is making some cycles faster, right? If you can make things in order of magnitude faster than you have better developer experience. Something that people bring up a lot is the benchmarks of IES built in the JavaScript ecosystem, comparing to Webpack or a parcel or roll-up. On the ESPP build website, they have a very prominent benchmark that shows that they are a hundred times faster than Webpack. And that is. And when anytime you increase things by orders of magnitude, that you unlock different usage of that tool. And so I think it's a very important thing to try to always look for areas in which you can speed up the feedback cycle because then you unlock opportunities for play. I think one of the best talks on developer experience that everybody has talked about is I think Bret Victor's inventing on principle talk, where he shows like, okay, if instead of jumping back and forth between your editor and your final output, why not just combine them and have your app or your writing be directly interactable so that you can shape it and play with it as you go along and discover new things because of the play. So I really am inspired by that. And there's a simple analogy to the shift left ideology that came out of IBM, which is that a lot of times when people discover bugs, they discover it very late in production, or even after they shifted in production. And if you shift things left, if you reduce the feedback loop of finding bugs, whether through tests or types or a QA or whatever, right? There's a whole bunch of techniques that are all developer tooling and development experience related. If you shift those items left from production back into the development time, then you enable the opportunity to increase the feedback loop in and correct your mistakes before they get too far out, or you build too much. So I really liked that feedback loop reduction, and then another developer experience thing, which I really like is this idea that everything is just there for you. In other words, you don't have to go out and assemble a bunch of different tools yourself, having an all in one package that with blessed the tools that are known to work together, I think is really helpful. One example of this is I'm actually going to venture out to the jobs review system and talk about Anaconda and Python. So Python is a fairly wide and huge community. But Anaconda is a specific distribution of hyphen with preselected pack packages that are all guaranteed to work together because dependency resolution was a huge problem for the Python ecosystem and the data scientists that were using Python, where it's spending so much time, like trying to say, like, does this work at the other thing? No, it doesn't. So I will have to both drop back to like an older version of the common thing, blah, blah, blah. Very common in JavaScript as well, by the way. But Anaconda actually managed to carve out a niche in Python and made Python, the de facto language for machine learning because they made that develop experience so much. And I actually genuinely think that they are, single-handedly responsible for making Python itself that much more popular. I think that's another interesting thing, which is like, where's the all-in-one for the 80% of use cases that don't need that much customization. Of course, if you want to customize sure, go ahead. You have the full power, but most people, they don't, they just have very standard needs. Let's just do this, just pave out the common path. And so that's how I went from using React. Which is the most popular Javascript framework, to Svelte, which Mike knows very well. And so has all the tools and tools included batteries included. And if I need to customize or drop out of it, I can. And I think that is also a really good developer experience in there so that the, all the ones who toolkit it, that doesn't constrain you too much.Mike: 16:57So really the question for 2022 is what's the Anaconda of JavaScript?Shawn: 17:01When Vercel talks about building the SDK for the web, that's what they mean.Mike: 17:04Yeah. Good point.Pauline: 17:05You gave me lots of flashbacks of playing around with Python over the past few years. I haven't really been in that ecosystem in a long time. Actually, Mike will be really proud of me, but I started learning and rebuilding one of my big projects. One of my, well, actually my blog, which is my biggest project, in Svelte, moving away from Nextjs. But, it's taking me quite a long time, longer than I thought, because there's so many. I don't know, there's so many different things that I need to learn how to use this Svelte way of doing things. But yeah, it's really interesting. It's a lot of fun. I understand why Mike and yourself love it so much. I think.Mike: 17:43We will talk offline about that Pauline.Pauline: 17:46So let's, let's do that. Yeah. Lots to, lots of talk about, yeah, it's messy. Yeah. Awesome. Thank you for sharing that.Shawn: 17:55One thing I'll share with you about this Svelte thing. I'm friends with Rich. I had come across Svelte, but actually ignored him for a year until I was like on a trip with him at Barcelona. And then he was like, he's still talking about Svelte. And I was like, okay, I have to try this because you can only be friends with someone so long before you have to try their things. And then I tried it and I was like, oh, okay. I'm an idiot for ignoring this for so long. But the other thing. Notice was that Svelte did not have a very strong community backing behind it. So actually started Svelte society as a part of the next stage of developer experience. So if you think about that reading radiating circle thing, had a very strong product already and it needed and it had pretty good docs. It needed the next level, which is community or DevRel, whatever that is. There is no first party DevRel for Svelte, but I guess Rich's the one had a one man show for that. The community part was the thing that I focused on and that's how Svelte society got started.Pauline: 18:45I was going to say, but this is what is this? Maybe the sixth or seventh episodes that we'll be posting on dev X pod and community has taken the lead every single time. It's always the thing that brings everything together. And it's also very validating because I focused on community at Gitpod so every time I hear it, I'm just like, yeah, that was great. Cool. Awesome. I wanted to move on to our next question, which is, where do you see DevX evolving? Will we be focused on tools or people or community?Shawn: 19:20I think, in line with the model that we've been developing, in this episode, either you integrate forward or integrate backwards, in other words, a typical typically develop experience is very tied to developer relations and a lot of first party content creation. So you integrate forward, meaning that talk a little bit more with community, you take on more community management roles or you encourage more, third party content by holding workshops and stuff like that. Or you integrate backwards, which is you get more involved with products. So I think that's an interesting way to think about this in terms of the radiating circles, but the other way to think about it as well is what's the shift within the content creation meta game, which I think about a lot as well. So for me right now is that I think a lot of people should be shifting towards video. I think that, the amount of time that how much time do you spend. You know, a week or a day I spent roughly an hour or two hours. Yeah,Pauline: 20:14exactly. I was going to say a bigger number than that, so, yeah. I'm glad you said your number first.Shawn: 20:19We all spend, we all spent a lot of time and a lot of times we're never going to spend on developer content because we're just on YouTube to veg out to. But I think people who do video very well are getting disproportionate attention. And I think it's a very scalable format. There are challenges with it, which I think Mike has maybe one up in the past before, which is that video is very expensive to produce and it gets outdated very quickly. There will be new tools that arise to fix that. But otherwise, I think the sheer reach of YouTube is just unparalleled. It is the second biggest search engine in the world. The content that lives on there, if you can get it to be evergreen, it can be extremely valuable. I still get comments on videos that I did two years ago, I always think about the half-life of content. The half-life of a tweet is four hours. The half-life of a blog post is maybe like a year or if it's a good blog post, if it's a normal. blog post that everyone is like treating us nothing special then. Yeah. It's probably a day or so. That will be irrelevant in a non-existent, but for videos. It's definitely very long. So I'm very interested in that. And I almost also interested in this idea of having a short game in the long game. It's kind of like tennis. If you only play long games, if you only stay at the back and you only love the ball and then you get killed on the, on the short game. Likewise. So in other words, do you have a short form game where you can pitch your startup in very short and concise detail? And do you have a long game where if people want to engage with you over very in-depth conversation, you also have ability to go deep and you have the content to offer them. I think having, so this is why I focus on having two minute videos and three hour workshops. you want to go extremes? There's a lot of 30 minute talks and podcasts out there. That's fine. But, I think the areas of relative under development are the short game and the long game.Mike: 22:12I had a conversation with a friend recently where she was asking me like, Hey, why don't we put some educational tech content on TikTok? And it was around the time when, TikTok had took over Google products in terms of like number of visits in 2021. And that was yeah, actually, why not? So I signed up for TikTok and I spent like 10 minutes watching videos. And I'm like, this is crap. Like what the heck? There's just too much stuff I don't care about. So I need a way to filter the stuff I care about. But then I started searching for things like web development, full stack development, and then whatnot. And there's a few things, but I think what you're saying in terms of the two minutes versus longer things, you can take that to an even other extreme of I'm going to take a real cheesy example, but array methods. One video, 15 seconds about each method and put it up there, see if it goes viral and people talk about it. But I think this is another platform that it's going to up and coming and currently not used for it, I think might be a really interesting play.Shawn: 23:11To see if it started watching it. I'm keeping eyes on it as well. The problem is that every, everybody knows array methods and you're not really doing anything for your work by explaining a writing methods. You might grow your own personal following, but that's also not a very valuable following. And let's just be real about that, right? If you get a whole bunch of beginners, then you will be incentivized to create more beginner content and you'll be stuck in beginner tutorial. And then I see a lot of people also get stuck to that because the numbers are only thing that matters to them. So I think, as far as philosophy of consecration goes, I definitely aim for some mix of intellectual curiosity and reach. And if you have only reach, then you may sell out yourself and you may burn out. You may not fall in love with the process. And I think that is the saddest thing in the world for someone to be in such a privileged job as a developer experience person, and to have your own personal intellectual curiosity, thrown by the wayside. I do, and they're doing courage to try to pursue some mix of reach plus first intellectual curiosity. I think the person that really does it best is Scott Hanselman. I don't know if you follow him. To talk as well. He does introductory stuff, but it's always authentic to him. He's not selling out. He's genuinely like, Hey, I think this is really important. And whether or not it happens to be advanced or intermediate or beginner, he's always very much that this is something he genuinely thinks in his.Pauline: 24:34The first thing that's on my mind is the fact that I love how in the past two episodes, actually we've been talking about, we've been bringing to light, content creation in developer experience because I don't think a lot of people think about that. Certainly until the previous episode, I didn't really think of developer experience, including content creation or including things like videos or tech talks, because the only thing I was thinking about was the products, like how can we make the product better? So that engineers on board quickly. So yeah, I really liked this conversation and it's really quite eye opening for me. I don't know. Mike, I wanted to say to your point, TikTok does get better after you train the algorithm. I was like, I don't know why anyone is on this app is just full of gen Z. I was just like, I don't understand this. But then after I started watching content that I actually liked it's really good it's really interesting. And now I've been hooked like at least an hour a day. I've been on it.Mike: 25:33But well, on the bright side, I have a lot of different methods to peel a pineapple now. So I learned aPauline: 25:43lot of, and the how to use an air fryer in all these different ways, how to cook all these different recipes. Oh, yeah, it's really cool. I just find it really interesting that content creation is included, but it really validates where my thoughts are in terms of content creation and develop experience as a whole.Shawn: 26:01This job, this industry is still very nascent, so it's not well-defined. So I don't think you should feel weird about it at all. I think for me, I came at it from my background, which is that we called this DevRel function, this content creation function at Netlify, we called it developer experience engineer. And so that's part of what we do. I should also mention that. Yeah, we were responsible for third-party integrations as well. So I guess.Pauline: 26:33Exactly.Shawn: 26:35But no, I think, at the end of the day, people wants to develop the tools. Companies want people to discover them and the best ways to, through content marketing. And that's why they hire people who are smart at that. And getting them down through that top of the funnel is very useful to them. I think probably where that we need to do better is that yes, I can pull a lot of people at the top of funnel, but if the product doesn't align with what they expect, then it's going to be a very leaky bucket. A lot of people going to come in, they're going to kick the tires and then they're going to leave. So how can we get a higher qualified audience or how can we get a product that is more intuitive or that retains people better? My own personal journey has been very much backward integrating into.Mike: 27:21Nice. Yeah, I feel like every episode we recorders, I always go away with it and I'm like, okay, let me think about all that again. And then I started researching and digging deeper and I'm like, there's a lot of interesting stuff. And we're really just getting started and five years from now, if we had another episode and talked about what is DevRel going? We would have a very interesting conversation, probably very different to today. Definitely looking forward to it. Cool. So one thing we tried to do is use kind of at the end of the podcast to wrap up with a fun thing that you recently came across with, or somebody you want to give a shout out to, that really made your day in the last couple of weeks or so? Um, yeah anything top of mind that you want to share?Shawn: 28:01I wasn't prepared for this, but I guess I'll shout out to obsidian. So I think for me, my personal note taking system is very much very important to me in terms of having it as a second brain where I store all the thoughts that I had that are still working progress or data points on some essay that I'm writing, but it's not done yet. And I moved around a lot from simple note to one note to notion. And most recently I made the shift to obsidian and the way I decided on this is that I really wanted to bet on mark down. I think mark down is a format that's going to. Longer than any of us. And that I also wanted it to sync, to GitHub and to have a good mobile application and obsidian match all of those things. Plus it has an optional service to publish your notes so I can share what I am thinking as I think it, for people who really care about, finding out before I publish something on my blog. Obsidian is a really good note taking.Pauline: 29:01I was going to say that is really interesting that you shared that for this week because Mike I'll just go next. But the thing that I wanted to share this week is actually LogSeq which is similar to obsidian. I don't know if you've heard of it. I think it's created by the same people or someone had left obsidian team and then built it. I'm not actually sure of the background. But I have been using it for the past two months now. And it's my favorite note taking app, just because, I think in bullet points. And I sometimes feel overwhelmed when I used to use other note taking apps where I would write like a long block of notes and then I try to organize it, but it just all felt overwhelming. Whereas when I have bullet points at the start of when I'm taking notes, it just like sinking things into my head better. I don't know. No, it just makes sense for my workflow. And then every single day, I don't need to worry about organizing my notes. I can just when I open up the app tomorrow, I will have a fresh, clean slate and I can start I'm taking notes of my day. And again, it's become my second brain because then I can just scroll back down and be like, what did they do yesterday again? And then everything is in one place. So yeah, LogSeq is my shout out of the week actually. And it was just really interesting that you brought up obsidian. Cause I think they go hand in hand. Well, but yeah, over to you, Mike, what's your fun thing about.Mike: 30:30Well, you really put me in a tough spot because I feel like I need to talk about my note taking,Pauline: 30:35I genuinely have this prepared in my notes. I was like, this is what I'm going to talk about, which is why I was really interested in,Mike: 30:42oh, I'll take the Liberty to do two things. One is my note taking app, which is Reflect.App. Exactly the same concept. You get a little graph every day. It gives you a new empty note, you take your note, but same idea. Markdown, I guess, for the win. The other thing I did have in my notes though to share is I don't even know if I should share it because I literally just found out about it two days ago when I read the landing page, but I want to dive deeper into it. It's swim.io with double M. And what they're saying is that they sync your talks with your code. So it's more of like a documentation tool for code, it seems well, the screenshot looks interesting. Let's say that. So I'm going to dive into it, but I figured this, is it something that is literally just top of mind, for today's podcast then? Um, I figuredShawn: 31:30out what share that. Yeah, we actually a hand-rolled we had wrote something like this for our own docs. I don't know if it's a startup. I remember this one because, swim, they raised a pretty big series, a 30 million, and also it's coming out of Israel. So it's just like a really it's the market, this big come on. But, uh, Hey, you know, it's a hard problem and it helps developer experience.Pauline: 31:53We'll link everything that we mentioned from this episode in the show notes, but we have reached the end of the podcast. Oh my gosh time has flown by. Thank you so much, Shawn, for joining us today, I'm excited to share this episode with everyone. So many things to think about, and Mike said earlier, I actually edit these podcasts, so I listen to them, quite a few times over. Every time I listened to them, I'm like, wow, there's so many ideas here that we can take on for Gitpod, for community or whatever it is. I'm really excited to re-listen to this multiple times, take the best bits and then share it with everyone. So yeah. Just want to say thank you again.Shawn: 32:30Well, thanks for having me pleasure. I'm really excited that you guys are doing this because people are dying for more DevX content. Every time I post something about it. You know, how I feel about that mix now? And so every time I posted about it, I always feel like a bit of a mix of like, okay, like, this is interesting, but also I don't want it to define who I am, but I think it, yeah, it's definitely very valuable and people are very interested.Pauline: 32:51Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. I'm sure it's going to be an interesting lesson to a lot of people!
Logseqは、個人のデイリーベースのマネジメント&ワークログみたいなツールとして素晴らしいのではないかな、という結論でした。 今回出てきたノートアプリ Logseq Roam Research – A note taking tool for networked thought. Obsidian ご意見、ご感想はTwitterのハッシュタグ#ごりゅごcastかお便りフォームにお送りください。
Wir sprechen darüber, wie wir aktuell versuchen, unser Wissen zu managen und warum wir ein neues Verfahren wählen.
In this episode, I play a song by Shake Well; goodbye to Don from the dog park; Logseq is another option for personal knowledge management; I listen to Cortex and I am unsure why; I'm past the time of productivity hacks; I am coining the term “hustle porn” (note: this term has been around for … Continue reading Evil Genius Chronicles Podcast for February 24 2022 – Onslaught of Plant Semen The post Evil Genius Chronicles Podcast for February 24 2022 – Onslaught of Plant Semen first appeared on Evil Genius Chronicles.
In this episode, we chat to Shawn (also known as Swyx online) about his take on developer experience as a discipline - we have hot takes, developer love for Svelte, video content and have analogies about radiators. This one's a good one! The hosts ▻Pauline Narvas, Senior Community Engineer at Gitpod (https://twitter.com/paulienuh)Mike Nikles, Senior Developer & Success Engineer at Gitpod (https://twitter.com/mikenikles)Our guests ▻Shawn Wang (https://twitter.com/swyx)Things mentioned ▻Temporal (https://twitter.com/Temporalio)Obsidian (https://obsidian.md/) LogSeq (https://logseq.com/)Reflect.App (https://reflect.app/)Swimm.io (https://swim.io/)Let's chat some more! ▻Gitpod Discord Community (https://www.gitpod.io/chat)Start a Gitpod workspace! (https://www.gitpod.io/)DevX Conf (https://www.devxconf.org)
Wir besprechen unsere Zettelkasten Setups. Jan baut sein eigenes Obsidian UI Theme, Arne ist zu Logseq gewechselt. Wie wir unsere Notizen strukturieren, welche Tipps wir dafür haben, und was das PARA system ist, erfahrt ihr in dieser Episode.
Logseq 是一款注重隐私(数据存储在本地)、开源的笔记工具。上手简单,又足够灵活,可以记录想法、笔记、管理 Todo 等等。我自己近一个月每天都用它来记录各种事项。这期节目有幸邀请到了 Logseq 的创造者秦天生(tiensonqin),来聊聊 Logseq 背后的故事和理念。 嘉宾:秦天生 主播:limboy, laike9m 时间线 00:56 - 01:18 天生的自我介绍 01:25 - 18:35 Logseq 是什么、创作初衷、核心特点和成长过程 没有满足需求的工具,就自己来写一个 投资人自己就是 Logseq 的用户,还会写插件 17:55 - 30:57 你自己是怎么使用 Logseq 的 团队内的协作,通过 Git ,把大家在做的事情、需要的帮助等整合到一个 Daily Page 中 也用过 Trello,但 Logseq 在串联上下文这块很方便,也方便 Weekly Review 时差和语言上的障碍需要克服 目前使用起来还不够方便,在开发多人协作的版本 使用标准格式的文件,方便数据的复用 Local First 是重要的考虑项 30:57 - 33:56 一天的时间是怎么分配的 早期大概一半时间开发,一半时间在社区,会跟用户视频。现在内部的协调会占用更多的时间 投资人因为也是重度用户,会提很多想法,甚至提供 UI/UX 优化文档 33:56 - 38:50 作为 Founder 最大的挑战是什么 在多语言,跨文化的背景下,如何让团队协作更高效 看清楚未来 插件很快就可以 GA 了(不需要再通过 Developer 模式开启) 38:50 - 42:05 从一开始就非常注重英文用户和海外市场,这个当时是怎么考虑的 比较自然的选择,开源吸引了很多英文用户,前同事也在加拿大,Discord 作为兴趣小组也挺成熟的 42:05 - 50:37 国内用户和国外用户使用习惯上的差异 差异不大,为中文用户提供了些便利(如输入两个中文方括号自动转换为英文) 部分用户会希望将其他 App 的功能嫁接过来,也会提不少想法,甚至提供文档对比不同 App 的交互细节 国外用户在录制介绍视频上很有一套,发完视频后有时会在 Discord 上 Cue 一下,问是否合适,非常客气 50:37 - 51:52 现在用英文沟通是否已经非常纯熟 聊产品、技术、理念这些问题不大,但生活化一些的俚语还差一些。 51:52 - 56:52 选择 Clojure / ClojureScript 的原因 一方面比较熟悉,另一方面也有不错的 dataScript 库可以用,函数式语言在数据操作方面会有些优势 56:52 - 64:18 选择相对小众的语言会不会有提高 Contributer 的门槛 会提高些门槛,但 Clojure 的学习成本其实也没有那么高,有几个贡献者就是周末花一两天看了下文档,然后就去修复 Bug 了 另一方面小众语言会吸引更优秀的人才 。(就像两人聊天,如果都看过神探夏洛克,这很正常,但如果都看过神探加杰特,这就有的聊了) 也有些用户因为 Logseq 使用的技术,而去了解相关的内容,如 dataScript / dataLog,因为要写 query。 应聘的人数还挺多的。招人会有许多渠道,如 v2ex, clojure 社区,Twitter 等等。对语言不做要求,但要有解决问题的能力 64:18 - 71:45 快速迭代过程中的一些痛点 目前测试还不够充分,对于出现过的 Bug 会优先补充测试,避免再次出现 对 Logseq 的愿景是信息的操作系统,目前虽然能够承载成千上万个 Markdown 文件,但对于想要达到的愿景来说还不够,所以在数据库的性能和扩展性就会有很高的要求。Rust 在数据库以及其他 CPU 密集的场景就比较有优势。 71:45 - 74:08 目前的人员配比对于重前端的业务会有影响么 目前团队最缺的是设计师和资深前端工程师 74:08 - 77:34 Logo 是什么含义,Logseq 的寓意 Logo 的含义一个是脚印,人生一些值得纪念的东西记录下来。还有就是一家人,知识的传承 Logseq 的取名主要是想找一个唯一的名字,搜索可以立即找到 77:34 - 83:13 做 Logseq 过程中一些印象深刻的事情 使用 Logseq 的用户分享的一些使用经历,如日本大学的一个教授在课堂上通过 Logseq 的幻灯片功能教学,一些学生也开始使用了起来 早期是通过 Github 来同步,对普通用户不太友好 Shopify 的 CEO 也是 Logseq 的用户,还写过插件 83:13 - 87:58 Stable 版本有计划什么时候放出来么 没有明确的时间点,先把 Bug 修了,已经构想了一些 Feature 待实现 迭代节奏上跟 Roam Research 的一些区别 87:58 - 89:08 Pro 版本的推出计划 Feature 上主要是文件同步和加密,以及协作上的一些增强 89:08 - 91:28 移动端的一些进度 Android 在内测了,iOS 版本顺利的话也很快可以内测了 手机端也是基于 WebView 来做 91:28 - 96:57 其他方面的规划 等多人协作功能出来后,把重心放在如何促进人学习和思考方面 把 Logseq 作为基建,在这之上构建知识库,形成学习社区 想做一个 GitHub 和 Wikipedia 的 2.0 版本 ShowNotes Logseq OrgMode Roam Research CRDT(Conflict-free Replicated Data Type) Solid Project RemNote 节目收听方式 除了 Apple Podcast 国区的各大泛用型播客平台 小宇宙 - ByteTalk 订阅 Feed URL 和不同的人聊天,会收获很多不同的东西,作为一个「老」程序员,我想跟不同领域的程序员们聊聊他们的故事、经历和感悟,或许也可以给正在收听的你一些启发。 欢迎在节目下方留言,如果你也有想聊的,可以邮件沟通:hi@limboy.me,一般会在两天内回复。