@shironeko Another option would be to basically put the entire Python implementation in the `except` block of a `try: ... except ImportError` construct, but that's ugly and horrible and also I'm not sure it would play any nicer with `git cherry-pick` anyway.
@shironeko That's how it already works. Right now `import datetime` defines the whole Python implementation, then tries to import the C implementation to overwrite it.
After this change, `import datetime` will work more like `import zoneinfo`, where it tries to import the C implementation, then on failure it imports the Python implementation.
If you are a #git expert and understand how `cherry-pick` works at a fundamental level, I'd appreciate if you could take a look at this StackOverflow question: https://stackoverflow.com/q/75825183/467366
Trying to figure out the best way to merge a specific PR that will make importing `datetime` significantly faster.
There actually does seem to be quite a bit of overlap between what he's talking about and what @simon has done with datasette and dogsheep.
Found it: this was Pascal van Kooten on Podcast.\__init__: https://www.pythonpodcast.com/nostalgia-personal-data-repository-episode-248/
He was talking about his project Nostalgia: https://nostalgia-dev.github.io
Aww yeah, I am very ready for some lab grown meat: https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/03/21/1165071880/fda-gives-2nd-safety-nod-to-cultivated-meat-produced-without-slaughtering-animal
I'm guessing just 2-4 more years of bureaucratic hurdles until it's available but expensive, then 15 more years until I can eat a cultivated eagle steak with elephant marbling.
I work at 2U on edx.org and Open edX. We are hiring: https://2u.com/careers/jobs/?keyword=&team=12&location=215
@simon @jonafato @talkpython I don't think so. I remember the person on the podcast had a story where they were trying to remember something they had done or learned, and they were able to figure out what it was because they remembered that they had learned it while riding a specific train or something, so they were able to cross-reference their location data to see when they were at that train and then check their notes taken around that time (details here might be all wrong, but I don't think there's anything like that in Simon's podcast).
I also sort of think that I listened to this pre-pandemic.
@liaizon @talkpython Obsidian looks sort of promising, but it's a bit too free-form, and I'd like something a bit more multi-media (e.g. sometimes I have something to record but don't want to stop and type it out because I'm walking from place to place, I'd prefer to just do a voice note and hopefully transcribe it later).
@aj @talkpython Hmm.. That could have been, but I think the focus was much more about this person quantifying their own life. I am not sure what the Python angle was.
The reason I'm looking for this is that I'd really like to set up a system where I can easily capture small snippets of information about my day, like a journal with a bit more structure.
There are a bunch of numerical things that I track in sort of haphazard and idiosyncratic ways — I measure my weight and body fat % and track it in Google Calendar, I have a "Track and Plot" app on Android for my Uric Acid levels, and I use paper and pen to track my weight lifting.
I'd love to be able to have a free-form journal that can include voice/audio or text, plus numerical, boolean or structured data entries at specific points. Ideally something that uses an open format and can easily be synced between an app on my phone and something on my computer.
I vaguely recall that I listened to an episode of @talkpython or Podcast.\__init__ or something where the guest had some sort of elaborate system for documenting everything about their life. Might be some sort of quantified self thing. Anyone else remember this and can track down the link?
@art My understanding is that this is frequently a condition of state funding for local libraries. Basically every library in California will offer library cards to every California resident. New York is the same way as far as I know.
Just a quick reminder!
In California, the Los Angeles Public Library allows you to get a library card even outside of LA, as long as you live in California.
With your, #LAPL account you have access to a lot of program including free #LinkedinLearning and #Coursera.
https://lapl.org/education-research
Other Public libraries probably offer the same.
For anyone who is interested in how my quest for a perfect rice container went, I ended up going with these, which seem pretty much perfect: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08BMTDZ39
They've held up just fine through multiple cycles of dishwasher and microwave, and they stack perfectly.
CVE-2023-21036 / acropalypse is absolutely bonkers.
Apparently for 5+ years the cropping / editing tools for screenshots on Google Pixel phones was only overwriting the start of the screenshot PNG file, but not truncating.
All screenshots shared for the past 5+ years might have data recoverable from them. Demo available at https://acropalypse.app/
Google still hasn't communicated anything on this.
(h/t ItsSimonTime on Musk's site)
It seems amazing to me that apparently no one has made a voice recorder / voice memo app that works with Android Auto. The built in assistant is... extremely limited, and will only do voice-to-text for very short recordings.
It seems like a lot of people (like me) want something where they can press a button and it starts a new audio recording, but I haven't found any audio recording apps that even *show up in Android Auto*.
Given how simple this kind of app is, and how common I'd imagine this feature request to be, I wonder if there's a technical limitation, or if I'm just terribly bad at searching for these types of thing...
Pro-tip: When you are done eating your Lucky Charms, these packing materials are actually edible, and can be used as bird seed or compost!
@tylerdave I've been happy with https://github.com/moezbhatti/qksms for a month or so after needing a new app for the same reason.
Programmer working at Google. Python core developer and general FOSS contributor. I also post some parenting content.