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Mar 25, 2024

Hello (again) world!

I’ve sorely neglected this site. It’s been four years since last post. I got the urge to write today and…wow…what pain.

The prior version of this site was a bespoke Next.js app forked from somewhere forgotten. I attempted to run it with npm i && npm run dev. Wall of inscrutable errors. Something must have changed with Node.js in the last four years. Next.js v9 must not be compatible. This is not how I’m spending the afternoon.

Title: Team Topologies: Organizing Business and Technology Teams for Fast Flow by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais
ISBN: 1942788819
Date Read: April 2020
Recommended: 10/10

When I read non-fiction books I highlight salient points. I then export these notes to act as a point of reference for my future self. I may also share them with colleagues to quickly bring them up to speed with key points. All quotes reference a Kindle “page” location. My biggest take-aways are highlighted.

I struggled for some time with intense wrist pain. I suspected this was due to poor ergonomics while computing. Over the years I iterated through a variety of input devices (Microsoft Sculpt, Trackman Marble Wheel, Magic Trackpad) with limited success. My current setup has finally alleviated my pain. I can use the computer for a full work day plus hobby project time — all pain-free. The key to my setup is an Ergodox EZ keyboard and a handful of software tricks.

I 💛 ./go scripts.

If you aren’t familiar with them, give Pete Hodgson’s overview posts (1, 2) a read.

I make it a point to include ./go scripts in every project I work on. A ./go script will significantly increase new developer productivity. Any open source project looking to lower their barrier of entry should adopt one.

Since I value them so much, I created dot-slash-go, an extendible, friendly framework for project ./go scripts. It enables you to create a better developer experience with less effort.

Jan 09, 2016

With the recent release of Visual Studio for Mac and Jetbrains Rider I’ve gotten the itch to explore the current state of the .NET ecosystem. Microsoft has made some bold strides in cross-platform compatibility and I was curious about the development experience.

I was a .NET developer from the betas of Framework v1 to .NET 4. At that point I transitioned to MacOS (at the time OSX) and a variety of non-Microsoft languages and platforms. The switch broadened my horizons while simultaneously making me really appreciate Microsoft’s efforts.

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