Skip Navigation

Posts
2
Comments
11
Joined
3 yr. ago

Backend developer & Software Engineer

Also likes anime, sci-fi, beer and mexican food, and not always talk about himself using the third person form.

  • It depends hardly on the kind of keyboard/mouse you want. My recommendations, based on workstation I'm keeping at home:

    Keyboards

    • Logitech K780 (as @supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz said)
    • Logitech MX Keys (full or mini, if you don't mind about numpad), this is my top keyboard atm, the one I'm using as developer mostly.
    • Logitech G413/G413 TKL (wired, but works nice out of the box, mechanical, perfect for gaming and typing)

    Mouses

    • Logitech G203 (wired, works nicely on Linux too)
    • Logitech M650 Signature (my favourite mouse, actually)
    • HP 430 Bluetooth Mouse (works nicely, and does not require dongle because it works throught USB)

    Extra

    Logitech devices use to have all-in-one dongles, so you only need one for connecting all devices, saving you some USB ports. The unifyied dongle looks like this.

  • I don't know many people who choose Bun instead of Node or Deno, but all of them do it because speed.

    IMHO, I like Deno because it's offering solutions for everything and trying to not fall into same issues Node had (same creator, trying to apologize), but eventually I run into Node because TypeScript and easy-to-use (in my experience). Anyway, Bun always has been to me like the third wheel of the bike.

  • I understand the concept, but the autistic engineer I have inside is a bit uncomfy with the design of this pile, implying that AWS depends on Azure.

  • Litertally. I was going to comment exactly this.

  • It means League of Legends is bad, but Doom is not.

  • This one is Logitech MX Keys, I'm using it as regular work keyboard (I'm software developer), but too big for jams, so I was thinking about something like MX Keys mini or Logitech Pebble, both TKL and bluetooth. Also a portable 15.6 screen because carrying this Lenovo one would be problematic.

  • Steam Hardware @sopuli.xyz

    SteamDeck drawing setup (Huion HS64 and Krita)

  • There is several ways to post your docs without wasting money, in a far better way, like using ReadTheDocs or just generating it with whatever library made for your project's language, like Pydoc, and serving it from GitHub Pages.

    It's not even complicated, I don't know why keep making it complex...

  • Never heard about projects using Discord for docs (sounds terrible and useless, tbh), but now I'm afraid of it.

  • Donations to free software projects are pretty important. Since most of big ones are maintained by companies which has a partnership with foundations, lot of most free software projects (libraries, components, apps, etc) are maintained by small amount of volunteers, who paid everything for the project.

    So, this not mean to make you rich, but at least having a coffee paid by some Lemmy user who uses your piece of software and wants to be grateful, makes you a bit more happy.

  • Classic XKCD. I'd pay for a Die Hard version like this.

  • Formerly I used Terminator, because I liked to split the screen. Then I moved to Kitty because having a GPU-powered terminal sound amazing, and now I'm using gnome-terminal because I'm trying to get back to simply and default.

  • Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    Paid by the PostgreSQL gang