The command that I can never get right the first time is ln
. I always end up creating a dead link inside my target folder, even when I read the man page directly prior.
Software developer in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Dad to 2 kids.
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The command that I can never get right the first time is ln
. I always end up creating a dead link inside my target folder, even when I read the man page directly prior.
I’ll usually do steps 1 and 2 for a reasonably complex review. I’ll reference the diff from the website (for work, this is Azure DevOps, for personal, GitHub or similar) while I inspect and run the modified code locally.
If using open source projects and sharing my experience by helping others on forums and logging detailed bugs when I find them counts as contribution, then everyday.
I’m a software dev myself, but I have enough on my plate with my day job and two kids that have to be taken to all manner of activities. I don’t know how all these people find the time to work on free software, probably for little to no compensation, but my hat is off to all of you, wherever you are.
Doesn’t it bug you that the LMDE logo in neofetch has the top line messed up? I have all my local systems patches and there is a PR up on their repo for it.
puTTY, my favourite terminal program for windows.
I’ve been using it for about 1.5 - 2 years. It’s always been there for me.
I use AntennaPod as well. I cast from it all the time.
I use things in all 4 quadrants. Ahhhhh!
I remember running Slackware and having to recompile the kernel for just about any hardware you added. I configured a box to be used as a router before routers were something you could get commonly at Best Buy.
I was taking comp. sci. at university and all our work was done on Sparc workstations. Having a Unix-like machine at home was a great help during that time