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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?

I'm not sure why a container-based build isn't the default recommendation on the dd-wrt or OpenWrt forums. But here's mine:

github.com/kc0bfv/DDWRTLinksys

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It's my first container-based build environ. I'm not sure what other folks do, but I'm mounting the source dir in the container (with -v), changing to that dir (with -w), and running the compiler. When that's all automatic via make, it's seamless and easy. So I think I like it.

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Cross-compile build environs usually screw up my normal host environ more than I like, and compete with each other, so I'm putting it in a container.

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