that was fantastic. i didn't watch the talk, i opened up the transcript and thought to myself i would read a few slides and see if i enjoyed it. that was maybe 20-30 mins ago and i finished it all. really well done, i enjoyed it from start to finish.
i like the way she broke it down. i feel like the author addressed ways to learn and communicate effectively and also grounded it in very concrete terms. i don't want to get too much into psychology or anything which i really am not qualified to talk about but i feel like going through these types of ways of learning and communicating is a continued exercise in ego deflation and in pragmatic problem solving.
i liked the SQL order-of-query-operations thing, the bash and shellcheck thoughts (i will use `-o all` from now on), i am curious to play with the DNS tool (the article links to https://messwithdns.com/ but the actual URL - taken from the text - is https://messwithdns.net/ , FYI), and i enjoyed the part about HTTP (i was hoping she would talk about SPDY and whatnot, i have not even begun to explore such things and am curious what that is all about).
i am going to read the two posts linked the behind-the-scenes on "hello, world".
i like the way she broke it down. i feel like the author addressed ways to learn and communicate effectively and also grounded it in very concrete terms. i don't want to get too much into psychology or anything which i really am not qualified to talk about but i feel like going through these types of ways of learning and communicating is a continued exercise in ego deflation and in pragmatic problem solving.
i liked the SQL order-of-query-operations thing, the bash and shellcheck thoughts (i will use `-o all` from now on), i am curious to play with the DNS tool (the article links to https://messwithdns.com/ but the actual URL - taken from the text - is https://messwithdns.net/ , FYI), and i enjoyed the part about HTTP (i was hoping she would talk about SPDY and whatnot, i have not even begun to explore such things and am curious what that is all about).
i am going to read the two posts linked the behind-the-scenes on "hello, world".
thanks for the link!
edit: two things this made me think of:
1. the XKCD comic "ten thousand": https://xkcd.com/1053/
2. Mark Russinovich on git: https://twitter.com/markrussinovich/status/15784512452490526...