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Today in #FreeSoftwareAdvent, today it's OpenSMTPD¹.

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  • @rubenerd @exchgr also, note that weather app has all the things I probably wouldn't have bothered doing on a small throwaway project because they're tedious: Good test coverage, every static analysis option possible, nice packaging and automatic deployment to the server when tagging a release via Github actions. All that would have taken me days to write by hand, even though that's exactly the kind of stuff I do every day at work, versus a few minutes of prompting and occasionally correcting.

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  • @aeva ahh I see, makes more sense knowing about swipe. I never did figure that out myself, heh.

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  • @rubenerd @exchgr I could have built the weather app in...maybe 3x-4x the time it took? But, I probably wouldn't have, because I didn't want it three or four times more than that amount of effort.

    I've got two other much larger projects that haven't really launched yet, that have also taken remarkably less time than I would have required doing it myself.

    I hate being "rah rah AI", but I'm not going to lie on the internet about it when I know it's gotten really good at writing code.

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  • @johnlogic I’d remove the AA and the “just classes” from education. If you’re concerned about gaps, you already call it “career impact” so it doesn’t have to be complete.

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  • @GhostOnTheHalfShell

    By posting on here, tapping into my social network is exactly what I'm trying to do.

    I've heard that weak ties can be the most powerful, especially when job seeking.

    I also have a pretty extensive professional network, as I volunteer for the world's largest technical professional organization, IEEE.

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  • @rubenerd @exchgr I was dragged into it by my employer, as I like having health insurance, but it works. Over the holidays I built a bunch of stuff (an absurd amount of stuff), more working code than I've ever written in such a short time in my life. I wanted a weather app without ads, so I built one in a couple of hours. https://wthr.lol/ (And, if you're curious about code quality, it's here: https://github.com/swelljoe/wthr.lol )

    I've used it to find bugs in huge projects and build from scratch.

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  • @aeva *it turns out, sometimes the juice is not worth the squeeze

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  • @rubenerd @exchgr yeah, I read all the studies and felt quite smug about AI, as well. And, then I actually built some stuff and found some bugs with current gen frontier models, and my priors were upended.

    I'm not saying I like it, as it's going to cause a tremendous amount of disruption, and not in a good way, given who holds every leadership position in government and industry right now. But, I simply can't pretend it doesn't work, anymore, because I've seen it with my own eyes.

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    Today in #FreeSoftwareAdvent, I realized how much my daily setup changed over the years.I removed my external monitor and keyboard.Not to be minimalist, but to reduce context switching.I kept the mouse because speed still matters.Working sometimes from my parents house made it clear that relying on an external monitor was fragile, so I forced myself to work only with the laptop.The same thing happened with software.Vim slowly became nvi.Alacritty became xterm, then st.I didn’t look for lighter tools, but for ones I could trust and reason about. Less abstraction, fewer surprises.Today I use two identical laptops -- one for work, one personal -- same setup, side by side, one mouse for each.The environment disappears, and the work stays.#suckless #st #nvi #xterm
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    Today in #FreeSoftwareAdvent it's lynx(1). Which is amusing because it's been scheduled for today on my calendar since the beginning of the month, but @neil chose to share links(1) today as well, for many of the same reasons. 😆It's been around for decades—I used it to browse gopherspace (and maybe WAIS?) in the 90s via a 1200 baud dial-up connection to a shell account and later the nascent WWW when it arrived.Sadly, ClownFlare, Google, and anti-AI-bot/scraper tech has made many formerly-accessible-with-lynx sites now inaccessible, some blocking by User-Agent, some blocking due to the lack of JavaScript support.But it has the right amount of usability and friction, so I can use it from my command-line-only writer-deck netbook to do a little research or read some HTML documentation, without getting sucked into the modern web.My custom configuration puts it in Advanced mode (no help-bar at the bottom), specifies vi-key-bindings, a custom color-scheme, uses links-and-form-fields-are-numbered making it easy to jump to them, and text-fields-require-activation so I don't get stuck in text input boxes when using j/k to scroll up/down in the document.I also have a couple shell wrapper-functions to invoke lynx on particular URLs (Wikipedia, dictionary/thesaurus/rhyming resources, web search, etc) with the CLI arguments filled in.I also have mutt configured to show text/html messages in lynx (either using `lynx -dump` and the internal pager, or using `m` from the attachments menu to view it interactively)
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    Following on the heels of ssh(1) yesterday, today's #FreeSoftwareAdvent is rsync(1).It's one of the key elements in my podcast listening (more on that to come later this month), where my podcatcher pulls down podcasts into a backlog tree structure, and I rsync the whole thing to my phone for listening. It also undergirds my blog deployment, building in Nikola (still gotta find some time to switch that to my custom Makefile driven build process) and then rsync'ing the output/ tree up to my web-server.And last night our teen wanted our family photo website content's pictures for a school project, so I was able to rsync the latest copy of them to a backup USB drive that he could browse offline.It's reliable and does a particular job (keeping two directory trees in sync) very well. Yes, ZFS send/receive is more efficient if both sides support it and they're whole datasets, but that's not always the case.Also, since I use bash as my shell, the "^" substitution makes it easy to issue something like$ rsync -n -avr $SRC $DESTand if it looks good, use$ ^-nto remove the dry-run flag and run it for real.
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    Today in #FreeSoftwareAdvent it's the venerable ssh(1)/sshd(8)While I grew up in an age where telnet(1) was my only option, the ssh folks made it a pretty drop-in replacement for the sorts of things I did with telnet, so switching was easy.With the exception of when I'm rebooting or our ISP is having issues, I almost always have at least one SSH connection open and likely more than one connection to other hosts. Even in the "security" of our LAN in the house, I still SSH between machines rather than use unencrypted connections for transfer.I love being able to run things remotely and use them locally, such as$ ssh me@remote dmesg | xsel -ibto put the remote machine's dmesg output on my system clipboard or$ tar czvf - /path/to/data | ssh me@remote 'cd /destination/path ; tar xzf -'to transfer a directory tree to a remote machine.It generally has sensible defaults, allows me to force key-based authentication rather than username+password auth.It allows me to limit $DAYJOB customers to SFTP-only access within their designated chroot directories, insulating them from each other.I use it to tunnel into work and forward my RDP VM's screen so I can access it locally with rdesktop(1)So many delightful little uses.Definitely worth reading @mwl's SSH book to learn more: https://mwl.io/archives/3126