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RT @mickeynp
's minibuffer completion is either something you put up with, or you abandon it for another completion framework.

But it's seen significant improvements in the last 10 years.

It's more feature rich and customizable than ever before.

👀masteringemacs.org/article/und

RT @IanRanen
This is one of those jokes I wish I had written. This is *chef’s kiss*

Excited for my long-awaited Summer reading, having found this classic at one of my local libraries

I don't like to get political on this account, but seriously, the cleanness, consistency, and absolute properties of programming are beautiful!
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RT @LittleFunnyGeek
@sabrinaesaquino Except Maga crowd and republicans: you need to be able to have some coherent and consistent ideas at the same time. You can’t be true (pro-gun killing children) and false (pro abortion killing mothers and no support to them) at the same time in codin…
twitter.com/LittleFunnyGeek/st

"Fastest!" advertizes Apple. But Safari doesn't even get an honorable mention here: cloudwards.net/fastest-browser

My real question, though, is, why is Googled Chrome faster than Chromium? Is it just proprietary caching?
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RT @apple
When it comes to speed, Safari is the world’s fastest browser.
twitter.com/Apple/status/15372

RT @tatut
XTDB inspector now has a simple tx page which shows latest tx log and can view details. Also the doc page can expand linked docs for easy viewing in place.

youtu.be/SkVzgFNv9d0

RT @LittleFunnyGeek
@paulschun I think the issue is to get the job with Clojure first xD. I actually demonstrated the value of Clojure at my workplace, by building many prototypes with it and after management saw the prototypes were as good as the final products with other langs, they kept Clojure xD

RT @paulschun
Clojure repeats as the top-paying language in the Developer Survey 2022. Despite that, I don't know a single Clojurian who's into it for the money!

Clojure also ranks third in most-loved language. Pretty much all Clojurians I know are into it because of that!

One of the experiments my super-org is trying is Mendix mendix.com/, a low-code dev thing. I am admittedly biased because I don't fear code, which seems to be the audience they are aiming for. I like code, I love open source and see it as a tech-moral imperative, and I rejoice in the community made possible by open source workflows. Has anyone else out there rubbed shoulders with Low-Code solutions like Mendix? Is there any good take to help clear the bad smell I get from them?

Today for my Digital Education Minute I taught my kids about why passwords are a bad idea, and also the fallacy of Security By Obscurity, and showed them what an SSH key looks like. "That's how you do a password!"

RT @swyx
quick code snippet for calculating "X days ago" given a specific date, with localized language

and ✨no dependencies✨

this ain't your parents' JavaScript!

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