After 10 years of commercial experience in #cpp I think I’m ready for a new chapter. I have played around with #rust#golang#zig and #clojure but most job offers that I see are for people with at least X years of commercial experience in this exact languages. Do you have any hints how to approach this? I would think that my previous experience as a #software engineer would matter. Especially since I do not expect to move to another senior role, I’m checking junior positions too. #jobsearch
„The Missing Semester of your CS education” is a series of lectures run by the MIT students. They discuss things like #shell, #vim, #git, #ssh. Worth watching, especially if you are new to the industry.
Do you use #freebsd#jails on your desktops, not servers? I wonder what use cases there are? I guess one could use them to keep multiple dev environments separated?
I think I was able to add #rss to my static website (based on the #orgmode files). I have used ox-rss package and hooked my own #elisp functions to format entries the way I wanted.
For now entries consist of post’s title and publish date. Description is just a placeholder since I didn’t yet figure out how to include only x first sentences from the post.
@dekkzz76 I thought that the main feature of RSS is to let readers know that something new was published, not to duplicate the whole post inside XML? I’m not an expert though.
From the reader perspective it sounds like a great feature. No need to leave the RSS reader at all. I will check this out - thanks!
I have finally created my own static website with #blog. It’s exported directly from the #orgmode to #html and #gemini. I plan to share #freebsd and other tech related things that I learn. My first post is about running #emacs in the server mode.