It is rare that I can work on any project in just one language. For my last project, it was mostly C++, a little bash, a little Windows batch, a little JavaScript, HTML, CSS, and a little Perl. That said, a big argument I have for using one language is code reuse and having a growing set of libraries that makes building the next project faster or easier. I have a strong preference for C++, for much of the reasons he prefers Go. And I appreciate that I can drop to the lowest level with C code (or even inline assembly -- I had a little of that in my last project) or take advantage of all of the nice OO properties of C++ with RAII. I had tens of thousands of lines of code and not a single malloc or free. C++ has come a long way.
I think we should build a *nix clone written in rust and have it compete with Linux. I think rewriting the existing project probably is too hard, let them compete and may the best OS win
I think everyone is well aware of what's underneath all those platforms, but those platforms aren't positioned in such a way that they really compete with Windows, or operate like desktop Linux, or macOS. It's not really comparing apples to apples. The closest of those is ChromeOS, but even then it's not intended for many of the use cases that Mac and Windows are. I think there's a big difference between Ubuntu and Chrome OS.
Congratulations brother now you reach 30 subscribers! Keep it up you will reach 100 and then 1000 pretty soon! ❤ And don't forget to use tags like linux, api or programming! 😊👌🏻
@@mSykeCodes Believe me or not that's up to you but i just wanna say that i am your number one fan! Always wait for your upcoming videos my brother! ❤️❤️😘😘
I work with text, and once I put ctrl alt and shift onto both sides on the bottom three thumb keys and moved backspace and delete away from the thumbs , the impact of an error of hitting the wrong one went down to zero (with some occasional recoding in my two key operating programs to dilute the impact of the wrong control or alt press, and just great for hotkeys in combination with the home rows. with a board this soft to the touch , moving negative and corrective functions to the pinkies on the edges really got me moving after a few weeks of tears. entirely worth it.
I don't know where to start, where to finish. Just to name few: * Configuring neovim is stresful: I'm finding it relaxing * GUI make you feel better: It makes me feel confused and lost, it need's screenshots in documentation * (...)
I went with this over the glove 80 because of a couple different things. Build quality was one, and I also heard the glove 80 could walk around a bit as you were using it. I type rather hard so I knew that wouldn't work. I'm also not a huge fan of low profile keyboards and I wanted the ability to tent the keyboard, so the advantage 360 seemed to fit my criteria better.
@@mSykeCodes Yeah, I’m not a super heavy typer, so movement shouldn’t be much of an issue. It has tenting, technically more fine tuned tenting, but much more fiddly. We’ll see how the lightness of it feels. I’ve not heard any actual build quality complaints, just that it feels flimsy because of how light it is and that that lightness also affects typing sound. We’ll see. It’s on its way!
Consider Micro Text editor has better keybinds than Nano. Yes true, Vscode is resource hungry and slow. NeoVim well it is efficient, but the keybinds I just can't use to it. Micro text editor is just a little larger than Nano, and decent for small edits.
Nice.. on the journey. What might help you out a bit is to add the secondary action where tap and hold feature to the esc and tab keys on the left where when you hold down the esc key it becomes the ctrl key, and holding down the tab it becomes the alt. That'll help if you dont acclimate to the ctrl and alt on those thumb clusters, or better yet, keep both options. I moved cut, copy, paste to the pg up, pg dn, home, and end keys (I use vim-keys for that), then you have those 4 customizable keys that you can assign whatever you want to like prnt-scrn (I use it to launch my screenshot utility), ins (for cli copy/paste (ctrl-ins, shift-ins). The shift keys can be set so that when you tap them they are open/close parenthesis. There are more customizable keyboards out there, sure, and I find that homekey mods that many promote doesn't perform perfectly on any keyboard I've tried, and I've tried a bunch. Great keyboard otherwise. Zero issues. You just have to do what you are doing and spend 20 minutes a day for a week or two on the typing sites to adjust to the keyboard, then you'll fly. It'll come.