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I brewed up some of this in the Aeropress this morning, and was enjoying it so much I wanted to share. Chapolera is a small roaster and coffee shop in Idaho Falls, ID, that just makes fantastic coffee. The owner is this cool Columbian woman who has fantastic consistent taste in coffee.

Now we live in Texas but every now and then I remember to order some beans online - recently I needed some more Aeropress filters (first time needing more in like 10 yrs) and thought, "I wonder if any little roasters I like would ship me some." Chapolera.

I don't really have a palate that can tell you what this tastes like - but it's way up there with my favorite light roasts from Merit, or Brown (San Antonio roasters). These are similar to Counter Culture's Hologram if you've had that, especially the El Pilar.

@brk awesome! I've seen from_fn used before, but haven't tried it. I was wondering if something like generators were in the language - that's great that they're coming. I love them in Python for a bunch of tasks.

I had been wondering - "if I create my own iterator structure, how do I implement map and all the rest on it?" During this talk it clicked for me why I don't have to.

Also loved the bit at the end between bound and unbound.

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A waltz through iterators in , while discussing how type-driven API designs can help.

youtu.be/bnnacleqg6k

@esther this article helped me with my error handling... I regularly find myself checking back in on it, actually.

nick.groenen.me/posts/rust-err

That's the Application section, which is most of what you're talking about in your post. But I find myself the API section more, then only needing some of the application patterns and not actually using the anyhow crate.

blog.ammaraskar.com/roku-tv-ph

A great walkthrough of finding bugs and putting them together to get execution on an embedded device. I especially appreciate this because I have a couple old at home and now I can consider using them as general purpose Linux boxes.

AI Imaginations - Fun Scary 

The thing under my bed right as I'm trying to go to sleep.

Another year, another blog post. I'm closing out 2022 by channeling my inner
@fasterthanlime with a deep dive into the basic TFTP protocol and my approach
to parsing packets in Rust. Please enjoy!

tuckersiemens.com/posts/parsin

#rust #rustlang #rustdev #tftp #networking #parsing #nom #blogging

I keep wishing there were an edition extended enough to include Tom Bombadil

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Just had a fantastic virtual with some high school buddies. 2022 baby, one for the books.

@ceoln @obi lol, bookwyrm. I'm on an Android phone right now, but following that method above, then clicking the finished date brought up a date picker, the date picker had a "clear" option, that worked for me.

Maybe it's a browser difference, it maybe you're getting to a similar but different dialog. I like bookwyrm quite a bit, but there are a few different ways to accomplish the same thing sometimes, and they don't all feel the same unfortunately.

@ceoln @obi if I navigate to a book page, then click the drop down for lists to add it to (default says "want to read"), then select "read" to mark to as already read, there is a started and finished reading date field with finished defaulting to today. But you can delete that and still click post/submit.

@lazzarello that's a pain. Probably email from GCP instances has a hard time getting through spam filters anyway... Can you forward email to a service like AWS's SES?

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