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Reposted Hazel Weakly (@hazelweakly@hachyderm.io)
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Ask more questions that you already know the answer to If you don’t know the answer, you’re going to spend all your energy learning the information But if you already know the answer you can listen to how they answer it, and what they’re really saying, which is often more useful than the answer

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Reposted OpenUK (@openuk@hachyderm.io)
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Attached: 1 image State of Open Con 25 will be back on 4 and 5 February and our CFP is now open across 7 tracks until 8 December. Successful speakers will be notified by 20 December when the Schedule will go live. Our tracks will cover software and security, hardware, data, mobile, finance, future of open source and future of AI. We will again have an incredible Delegate Experience area. Submit to the Call for Proposals: https://sessionize.com/state-of-open-con-2025/ #soocon #stateofopen #cfp

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Listened to What's new with GrimoireLab, the open-source community analytics platform by CHAOSS Project 
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In this episode, host Georg Link is joined by guests Courtney Robertson and Santiago (Santi) Dueñas to discuss the latest updates and future directions of GrimoireLab, an open-source tool designed to analyze community health metrics. They dive into how GrimoireLab originated, its current usage, and how organizations like WordPress and Bitergia are utilizing it for community contribution tracking. They explore the challenges of scaling the tool and the needs for further automation and data source integration. Courtney shares insights on how WordPress uses GrimoireLab to track contributors, improve sustainability, and automate reporting, while Santi explains the technical evolution of GrimoireLab, including moving to OpenSearch and improving database performance. Hit download now to hear more!

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Listened to Cup o' Go | 🎂 ¡Feliz quinceañera a Golang! 🪅
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🇩🇪 Hannover Go meetup, Nov 19🎂 Go Blog: Go Turns 15 📊 Video: The Business of Go by Cameron BalahanProposalsAccepted: End support for macOS 11 in go 1.25New discussion: Memory regions🗲 Lightning round🛞 Watermill 1.4: Event-Driven library for Go🛩️ Package singleflight provides a duplicate function...

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Aside from some crappy commentary about "working by committee" and "cancel culture", there was some interesting bits in this

Listened to Rails is having a moment (again) with David Heinemeier Hansson (DHH), creator of Ruby on Rails (Changelog Interviews #615)
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(Includes expletives) David Heinemeier Hansson (DHH), creator of Ruby on Rails and co-owner of 37signals, joined the show to discuss this Rails moment and renewed excitement for Rails. We discuss hard opinions, developers being cooked too long in the JavaScript soup, finding developer joy, the pros and cons of the BDFL...

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Listened to TypeScript ESLint with Josh Goldberg - Software Engineering Daily by SEDaily 
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TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that adds static typing with optional type annotations. It was created at Microsoft and first released in 2012. TypeScript ESLint enables ESLint and Prettier to run on TypeScript code. Josh Goldberg is a host for Software Engineering Daily, the author of Learning TypeScript by O’Reilly, and a Microsoft MVP.

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Reposted randomwizard (@randomwizard@vivaldi.net)
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My fellow human beings. Before joining Bluesky. You should read about Cory Doctorow's description of the Enshittification process. The first part of the process is vendors create high-quality offerings to attract users, even if it results in a loss of money. The idea is to get market share. I fear that mankind is trapped in an endless cycle with social media.

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Listened to Cup o' Go | 🎆 70,000 Go issues, and still going strong, Terraform for Factorio, and John Crickett on learning without LeetCode
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Go 1.23.3 and 1.22.9 releasedProposalsAccepted: 📂 Safer file open methodsLikely accept: Drop macOS 11 support for Go 1.25🎆 The Go project recently passed the 70,000 issues on GitHub, with net/http: short writes with FileServer on macos🇮🇹 GoLab tickets still available, Florence Italy, Nov...

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Why yes, on Wednesday I was presenting a very high-profile meeting at work  - why do you ask?

(Sorry that FitBit doesn't make it easier to export a graph more nicely)

A screenshot of Jamie's FitBit app, showing the heartrate for a ~90 minute period of time, leading up to the meeting.


The first heartrate spike is at 1450 (up to 114bpm), immediately before the meeting, and as I'm preparing myself with a final runthrough and check that everything's ready.


It relaxes down to 92bpm while other parts of the meeting are going on, a quick spike up to 110bpm as it's noted that I'm going to be presenting later.


A few minutes before I talk - at 1530 - my heartrate drops down to 84bpm (as I'm mentally playing "Moving On - Phaeleh") and then spikes to 107bpm as I start to speak at 1540.