85 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
85 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Dispatch #6 (August 2023)"
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date: 2023-08-06T12:00:00-04:00
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draft: false
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tags:
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- dispatch
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references:
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- title: "Why I don't use Copilot"
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url: https://inkdroid.org/2023/06/04/copilot/
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date: 2023-08-07T02:20:18Z
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file: inkdroid-org-belior.txt
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- title: "Phase change"
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url: https://www.robinsloan.com/lab/phase-change/
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date: 2023-08-07T02:20:18Z
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file: www-robinsloan-com-sbm0vr.txt
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- title: "The looming demise of the 10x developer: Why an era of enthusiast programmers is coming to an end"
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url: https://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2023-07-12-the-looming-demise-of-the-10x-developer/
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date: 2023-08-07T02:20:19Z
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file: blog-testdouble-com-krzanb.txt
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- title: "Daily notes for 2023-07-17 | Yes, Mike will do."
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url: https://mike.puddingtime.org/posts/2023-07-17-daily-notes/#notes-on-conflict
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date: 2023-08-07T02:20:20Z
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file: mike-puddingtime-org-svf0ua.txt
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---
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Nice to have a quieter month, though we still managed to spend a weekend at Lake Norman and took Nev on her first camping trip at [Carolina Hemlocks Recreation Area][1]. We also had a nice visit from my folks to celebrate my mom's birthday.
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{{<thumbnail 05569D5B "800x" />}}
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{{<thumbnail DBCE9DD4 "800x" />}}
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Tech-wise, I switched from Vim to [Helix][2], which I've detailed [over here][3]. I was also able to work through a whole bunch of the [Go track on Exercism][4] -- it's a good way to get a handle on the basics of a language, but doesn't cover using third-party packages, organizing large codebases, etc. To get that kind of experience, I'm going to try my hand at an app for fantasy sports drafts -- take a set of player projections and a scoring formula, and output a UI I can use during a live online draft. I've been doing this with spreadsheets for years, and it's pretty cumbersome. I'm going to use TOML for configuration, SQLite for data persistence, and [Bubble Tea][5] for the UI itself. We'll see how it goes!
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I've signed up for the [Bull City Race Fest][6] half-marathon in October. Training starts ... tomorrow. I'm going to try to mix in some better eating habits + cross-training this time.
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[1]: https://www.recreation.gov/camping/campgrounds/233954
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[2]: https://helix-editor.com/
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[3]: /journal/a-month-with-helix
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[4]: https://exercism.org/tracks/go
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[5]: https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea
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[6]: https://capstoneraces.com/bull-city-race-fest/
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This month:
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* Adventure: spending a weekend at Virginia's Eastern Shore with some childhood friends and a week at the beach with my family
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* Project: build a fantasy draft <abbr title="text-based user interface">TUI</abbr> app in Go using [Bubble Tea][5]
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* Skill: learn how to organize a larger Go codebase as part of 👆
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Reading:
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* Fiction: [_Tress of the Emerald Sea_][7], Brandon Sanderson
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* Non-fiction: [_The Creative Programmer_][8], [Wouter Groeneveld][9]
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[7]: https://www.brandonsanderson.com/standalones-cosmere/#TRESS
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[8]: https://www.manning.com/books/the-creative-programmer
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[9]: https://brainbaking.com/
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Links:
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* [Why I don't use Copilot][10]
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> I enjoy programming because it’s about reasoning, thinking, models, concepts, expression, communication, ethics, reading, learning, making, and process. It’s an art and a practice that is best done with other people.
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>
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> Increasingly I think it’s imperative for programming to be done more slowly, more deliberatively, and as part of more conversations with more people. The furious automation of everything is eating the world.
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* [Phase change][11]
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> *What could I do with a universal function — a tool for turning just about any X into just about any Y with plain language instructions?*
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>
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> I don’t pose that question with any sense of wide-eyed expectation; a reasonable answer might be, *eh, nothing much*. Not everything in the world depends on the transformation of symbols. But I think that IS the question, and I think it takes some legitimate work, some strenuous imagination, to push yourself to believe it really will be “just about any X” into “just about any Y”.
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* [The looming demise of the 10x developer: Why an era of enthusiast programmers is coming to an end][12]
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> That is to say, I’ve come to believe the era typified by the enthusiast programmer—autodidactic, obsessive, and antisocial—is drawing to a close.
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* [Notes on Conflict | Yes, Mike will do.][13]
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> Over time I shifted on the matter a little, but when I look back on it I realize I wasn’t really evolving my attitude toward conflict, I was just evolving my response to its existence, while still believing that being in a state of conflict is a problem. I just got better at keeping my blood pressure low and gritting through it. I think I was looking at conflict as a thing that you have to acknowledge exists, but that you need to get through as quickly as possible, because it’s a bad place to be.
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[10]: https://inkdroid.org/2023/06/04/copilot/
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[11]: https://www.robinsloan.com/lab/phase-change/
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[12]: https://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2023-07-12-the-looming-demise-of-the-10x-developer/
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[13]: https://mike.puddingtime.org/posts/2023-07-17-daily-notes/#notes-on-conflict
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