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Wordle 980 4/6
β¬π¨β¬β¬β¬
β¬π¨β¬π¨π¨
π©π©β¬π©π©
π©π©π©π©π©
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Wordle 980 X/6
β¬β¬π¨π©β¬
β¬π¨π¨β¬β¬
π¨β¬π¨β¬β¬
β¬π©β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
Lost today because of some inattentiveness/overconfidence early on in the game.
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Wordle 980 5/6
β¬π¨β¬β¬π¨
β¬π¨π¨β¬β¬
β¬β¬π¨β¬π©
β¬β¬β¬π©π©
π©π©π©π©π©
Ok, I have had my coffee, so you can all come out now!
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Wordle 980 X/6*
β¬β¬β¬β¬π¨
β¬β¬β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
β¬π©β¬π©π©
Too many choices...
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Where do I post "how to clone" ? Is it a"programming " question"?
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That would depend. What are you trying to clone? If you're trying to clone a system drive, that might be best under System Admin. If you're looking for a tool to help with that, questions like that pop up in the lounge from time to time. If you're trying to clone a sheep, then you're in the wrong place, entirely
"A little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down your pants"
Chuckles the clown
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I am trying for an a.., in need few more, not sure if my choice of word is OK...
Seriously - I have a link to github and like to pull a code example...
I did clone the .zip file and extracted the desired source.
as expected it contains many "include" files and I am too lazy copy each one as I go.
Basically -
how do I clone my example plus all the required includes?
In past I had reference what to "cone" in the original github,
but this one does not have such instructions..
GOT it!
It looks scary, bu compiler likes ot
//#include <simplebluez bluez.h=""> orignal
//#include <simplebluez exceptions.h="">
my mess
#include "../../A_BT_LIBRARY/SimpleBluetooth/SimpleBLE-main/simplebluez/include/simplebluez/Bluez.h"
#include "../../A_BT_LIBRARY/SimpleBluetooth/SimpleBLE-main/simplebluez/include/simplebluez/Exceptions.h"
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OK, I have been around the block few times AKA I am not in my "teens" , but I did look and did not find any "Clone" button / link etc.
Actually the reference was "closed" and liked to another "github"...
Thanks , all solved.
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Interesting thoughts on a Friday morning....
I spend most of my time at home these days coding in a converted dining room. It's just off the kitchen at the front of the house, has two large 6 foot windows facing the front yard (THAT OPEN - think fresh air), and full of furniture. 20 years ago, I got a deal on a large solid oak lawyer style desk plus a credenza (new would have been $4k+, I got it for $800). At the time, I had a 6' folding plastic table and an itty bitty metal workstation for the monitor.
Setting aside the fact that I'm dancing with retirement, I'm in the planning stages of turning it into a real work area. Suitable for s/w and engineering development with the necessary desk space to spread out various pieces of hardware, sufficient network connectivity and power. Lawyer desk is going... As a side part - since I'm dancing with retirement, I want to be able to use it as a hobby space. For a home office, probably the most expensive issue is power (means running a couple of dedicated circuits from the breaker box). Anyway...
I dusted off this old article from Joel on Software written in 2003 - Bionic Office β Joel on Software[^] and I'm using it as a general guide as to what I want.
I'm working with 120 square feet. It's a 10x12 dining room. So you know, when I bought this house, I had seven children, so a formal dining room was out of the question. Even so, when I go into customer locations, I am APPALLED at cubicle sizes and overall conditions. Maybe 8x8, and the only way they get away with it is modular furniture. The s/w area I go to on occasion is actually better - we need more room to spread equipment, but the entire design is "office" and not workspace. It doesn't help that the building manager who did the redesign was a cheap bas$$$$$. 15 years after this, a memo just came out asking if anyone wanted new chairs.
Is it any wonder why people don't want to go back to the "office"?
My plan is at least 2 walls with large floating work surfaces, outlets flush with the surface as well as a strip outlet under each surface. Wall mount locations for monitors to keep the work surface clear, under surface drawers and a couple of rolling file folder cases for the paperwork I cannot seem to get rid of and a place to put one printer.
Did I miss anything? What one thing would you change in your home office, assuming you have one?
Charlie Gilley
βThey who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.β BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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When the weather's nice my preferred office is either on my front porch or my back patio in an Adirondack reclining chair. I have small tables on either side of the two chairs and a chair desk for each as well. My wifi reaches both with a good strong signal.
The chair in the front has the benefit of being in the shade all day. During COVID I was out there working one day and my 20 lb cat was lying at my feet like a dog. A delivery truck stopped and the driver got out, pulled a package out and then stood at the end of the driveway working on his tablet. He finally looks up at me and asks "Is your dog friendly?" My reply was that my cat's a chicken and will be inside before he gets halfway up the driveway. Sure enough, Hunter (my cat) panicked and darted into the house.
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I don't need much more. (I live in a small apartment)
I need a slightly bigger desk for a 2nd monitor (yeah, I'm old school) and a proper drawer unit to hold my computer (now it's on a chair!)
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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At first I was confused by the shoe closet
Charlie Gilley
βThey who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.β BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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"80% of success is showing up." - Woody Allen.
No matter how you interpret his quote, you won't be successful in anything if all you do is sit around at home all day (although in today's age that's exactly how you make millions with YouTube, OnlyFans, Twitch...).
Personally connecting with people builds trust and relationships that can help you get ahead.
At the office you pick up on things.
I've had plenty of instances where I was stuck and a coworker asked me how it went and I explained the problem and they helped me or even someone who overheard was able to help me.
People also come to you with their problems, giving you new insights.
Of course it "hurts" productivity, if you measure productivity by lines of code.
I have a sort of 50/50 rule for my employees, but I'm a flexible employer.
My employees don't mind, we have fun at the office, they have a nice desk with plenty of space, they get work done, and it's a lot easier asking questions.
I'm convinced that a healthy mix is the best for everyone.
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I'm going to tend to agree with you on the showing up part. I need to get into cube Ville a few days a week. I just don't like the pig sty.
A few years ago, it would rain in my office.
Charlie Gilley
βThey who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.β BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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For my "VR/AR" and other "adhoc" gear, I have a "kitchen cart" so I can wheel things around for whatever reason. Everything won't fit in all the right places.
The "standard office" in my experience was 10x15 feet. Yes, a cubicle could be 25% of that. I had the basement finished when I bought my house. My office is the basement. Mind you, the basement celing is 9 feet with bigger windows (a cheap extra at the time; when it was being built; but no one seems to think of).
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Save space for your 3D printer and filament feeds!
If you start doing hobby stuff, you will want to print/assemble all the time.
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Moved my home office a few months ago to a slightly larger room in a 100+ year old house. Painful process after 20 years accumulation of stuffβ’.
Furniture and layout largely the same, traded some bookshelves for cupboards.
Main work space is a 180x80cm desk, with a 22cm shelf across the back, 25cm up.
The one big change I made was power distribution. I (and probably most of us) have lots of things that don't draw much, but still require an outlet.
One "master" distribution board ("tradie" type) running 2 x 4 outlet and 2 x 6 outlet boards. Surge suppressors all over, a couple of kJ rated capacity.
No extra extension leads.
So, off one 240V 10A wall outlet, I have a total of 20 downstream outlets, more than half of them committed:
Server
Monitor for server
2 printers (inkjet, laser)
Weather station
Cordless phone
Internet/phone modem-router
Laptop
External monitor for laptop
Speakers
Desk lamp
4 assorted chargers (in switched outlets)
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Yeah, like mine used to be, until the cooling bill became to expensive.
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How do you change the date?
Gus Gustafson
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Quote: Did I miss anything?
I have same space. I will send you:
30 year old cheap computer hutch.
3 bookcases
2 file cabinets
printer stand with B&W laser printer
plastic drawer stand with scanner
Old, small library table with assorted junk and large monitor for Pi
3 Workstation computers with an expensive ergo keyboard and 34" monitor.
2 very old laptops, one W8.1 and one 9 yo MacBook
2 drawers CD/DVD
drawer of diskettes
4 drawers full of IoT stuff, including Pi's, Arduinos, Photon2 and Beaglebone.
Beer making stuff, including my last batch bottled a week ago.
(enough so far? I have more)
>64
Itβs weird being the same age as old people. Live every day like it is your last; one day, it will be.
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For me the most important piece of equipment is a really good office chair. Don't skimp on that. Beyond that I'm minimalist. No printer - why would I want to print stuff, when I can see it on my monitor. No fancy power stuff - just a 6-way extension lead. And my desk is 24" x 48".
That minimalist approach, means I can easily move between my summer and winter offices. In the summer, I use a large, west-facing, unused dining room, which overlooks my back garden. The concrete floor means that it is always cool - even on the hottest of summer days. In the winter I move up to a tiny bedroom - which means I can keep warm without breaking the bank.
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