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is there a particular reason this was shared?

otherwise I'm slowly working on a Spoon that figures out if there is an active meeting in Zoom, Teams, Huddle, Google Meet and will allow for muting, video enable/disable and screen sharing etc


My guess is someone just found it. When I was moving to macOS for my work laptop, I was looking for something to replace AutoHotKey. It took me a long time and a lot of digging to actually find HammerSpoon.


this is a great post on putting together a mechanical keyboard. to note, to get involved in mechanical keyboards there are many ways to approach it:

1 - Buy a mechanical keyboard that's already put together - Razer, Logitech and Corsair and even makers such as Novelkeys have models that are ready out of the box!!

2 - Buy a kit - basically via group buy in most cases but you end up putting most or a few of the parts together yourself. Often these kits come with everything but sometimes you end up having to get the keycaps and/or switches yourself.

3 - Buy all the separate parts and choose your own adventure - this is another way!! Pick everything you want - case, pcb, switches, stabilizers, plates(or no plate if you want), switches and keycaps!

4 - Mod an existing keyboard - take a keyboard that you bought off the shelf and solder on your own switches or just change the keycaps. I have a great Cooler Master board that I moved the pcb into a custom housing. This option is not as common i feel but its out there!

While this can be a lucrative hobby do not feel like you cannot choose option 1 to get yourself involved. Its ok if you are not building everything from scratch or printing the the PCB yourself. Enjoy it, you are all allowed to be here!


novelkeys has a LOT of great quality keyboards for under lower prices. I have the milkshake nk65 and it is awesome.


- One desktop I built for gaming - lenovo laptop that runs windows and Linux - two Chromebooks - pi cluster(6) for services/workloads - pixel 4 and a couple iphones(3) - kids Kindle fire - two reading Kindles - mbp for work


work with a lawyer. it seems like you need to do this anyway to stabilize the next phase of your business.

you need to put a buyout in writing with an end date (yes, with lawyers help). that way if they actually come out of their shack to cash in when you reach better growth you can point to this legal document.

i would consider to put everything in writing- your work and effort, start to omit their info from the website and products, but i would not remove their name + cofounder from things until you've issued that document with an end date and timeline of how you will terminate them from your business.


I typically use terraform and ansible. tf creates/manages the infrastructure and then ansible completes any configuration.


This is the approach we take. We don't track states or do continuous config management either as we're all in on cattle > pets (and we don't typically have the time to maintain terraforms properly enough to do anything but cut new environments). Something gets sick? Shoot it and stand up another one.


i've used netlify for a few years, its great.

I use it with github. wanted to use github pages but was tired with having to use submodules in order for it to recognize the docs folder.


yeah the only way i ever received a raise was changing jobs. i guess it was because I knew what the answer would be if I asked for a raise: "do not have the budget." or "you have not met x expectations". whether that would be true or not, its usually a sign to move on.


devops is more of a principle than a job. that's my opinion though.

i've been reading through this book and it does a decent job of covering the principles for CICD, builds, tests releases: https://www.amazon.com/Continuous-Delivery-Deployment-Automa...

you'll run across various "thought leaders" in devops and its important to remember that a) each employer treats devops and cicd differently and you'll want to learn their practices as you bring about your own ideas to the culture and b) form your own opinions, just b/c thought leaders and books are out there its important to learn what you like to do and improve how you like to do it.


hey - can you explain a bit on how you use trello for project-oriented bookmarks? or is it just links in a tile?


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