You can also group tabs in the vertical view but also create separate „workspaces“ (to distinquish between different projects or even private <> work).
Though the most innovative feauture is their deep integration of services like Notion, GitHub, telegram etc.
Quite astonishing actually and definitely one of my favourite pieces of software.
Seems to me that Arc is inspired by Operating Systems in general.
- Workspaces/Desktops with mouse gestures
- Spotlight like Quick Launch
- Alt Tab like Tab switch
- Window management within the browser
- Dedicated area for Media control
- Widgets on mouse hover
So the difference there is that's just the song on repeat. OP's tool here will try to fill the song in with content-aware filler similar to how Photoshop uses a content-aware fill feature to try to guess what could be in the gaps.
For people who know every beat of Strobe, it sounds odd when things don't hit the same way, but at the same time it's kind of like a unique live mix.
I hate that the frequency of the bass kicks doesn't match the frequency of the eyes flashing, so they go out of sync. The eye flashing feels about 1 bpm slower than the beat.
This isn't really a thing with Apple Pay. You double tap the power button as you grab your phone, then Apple Pay is active (pending face id or unlock via watch), it's a very smooth process.
On top of that, in my experience, tap to pay (via card or phone) is much quicker to process than swiping or inserting chip.
Vital is one of the best free software synths out there. In terms of functionality, it competes with a whole lot of paid synths out there. For anyone getting started with making music or synthesis, this is 100% the recommendation I give.
I just wrapped up the interview process and got a job offer at >150k with 4 years of experience. I interviewed with probably 10 or so companies along the way.
I do not believe that "grinding leetcode" is at all necessary. However, familiarizing yourself with online "IDEs" and the skill of solving (relatively simple) problems quickly while communicating your thought process is necessary.
That being said, I would do a handful of Leetcode-type questions on your own time. Don't aim to solve as many as possible or even bother to hit the hardest questions. Most questions I received were actually pretty simple algorithms that any dev could handle. IMO it's more important to be comfortable in the environment, and be able to communicate well to your interviewer if it's live than to be able to come up with perfect solution instantly.
The better companies I interviewed with made the live coding portion a small component early on, basically as a screen for basic coding skill. After that, the most important parts were design, discussions on previous projects, and behavioral interviews.
Today is my last day at my current job. I had a colleague leave last year after he had some issues with his team, and I learned that a significant salary bump was pretty easy to get. I was _really_ bored at my role, and didn't see a strong future for our project and company, so I started looking.
I'll be starting a new job at the end of the month. Salary is over 2x my current pay, and if you include equity the total compensation will be 3.5x my current pay. I will have to relocate (which I wanted to do anyway), but I can't fathom why anyone _wouldn't_ be looking right now given the state of the job market.
> I will have to relocate (which I wanted to do anyway), but I can't fathom why anyone _wouldn't_ be looking right now given the state of the job market.
Could it be that most of your compensation bump is due to the relocation rather than the current market? To take extremes, moving to SV from almost anywhere in the world would result in such bumps, but that was already the case a few years ago.