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After more than a decade with Apple (and Windows before that), I’ve been using Linux with Omarchy exclusively for the past few months and have been very happy with it. Can’t imagine going back to Mac or Windows at this point.

I had never really used Linux as a daily driver (aside from sysadmin stuff on remote servers), but Omarchy setup took less than 10 minutes and getting comfortable took just a few hours. Since switching, I’ve seen clear productivity boost, and the competency gained in Linux, Vim, etc. and overall performance made it totally worth it.

I’m running it on a cheap ThinkPad for all my daily development work and it likely saved me over $4000 since I was planning to buy a new MacBook Pro before trying this. Haven’t touched my old MacBook in quite some time.

Just wanted to share my experience with Omarchy, definitely worth trying if you're on the fence.


A classic book. I learn something new each time I read it.

Also, Dave Thomas, one of the authors, is looking for a job.

> So, I'm looking for a job!

> Internal or external consultant, devrel, training, team fixing, design, architecture. WFH or travel the world.

> So, if you know any company that has a Dave-shaped hole, please email me. Some more about me on my site. Links below.

> Many thanks.

> email: dave@pragdave.me

https://x.com/pragdave/status/1978142569272877078


I know that there are many reasons for people to work after 65. I also know that sometimes life takes surprising turns. But it makes me nervous to see people so capable as Dave that are well known in our industry looking for a job. What is the hope of the rest of us ? I love software engineering but I still hope to be able to retire to work on my own projects.


100%


This post shows how your application servers (Rails, Django, Laravel, etc.) can offload file delivery to reverse proxy servers like Nginx using the X-Accel-Redirect (or X-Sendfile) header. We'll also read a new reverse proxy's (Thruster) source code in Go to learn how this pattern is implemented at the proxy level.


For a concise overview of all the new frameworks and announcements, I recommend reading the official Rails blog post from DHH:

https://rubyonrails.org/2024/9/27/rails-8-beta1-no-paas-requ...


Agreed, this should be the main link instead of giving AppSignal free publicity. The original is very much a light reworking of the original. It has the same content order and everything.


Would be nice if the site allowed me to link to a specific headline in the post.


You can append the dasherized version of the headline (or specifically, the id of the header) to go to that specific section:

https://rubyonrails.org/2024/9/27/rails-8-beta1-no-paas-requ...


Oh wow, I wasn't able to click on the headline so I thought that wouldn't work! Thank you!


yeah, OP feels like a gpt rewrite of this post by DHH


ConvertKit supports 10,000 subscribers on a free plan.

https://convertkit.com/pricing


Fixed, good catch, thanks! I started my research using other people's spreadsheets rather than checking every vendor's pricing. Must have had old data.


Author of the original post here. I have no affiliation with either the Flatiron bootcamp, nor the SuperByte company. But I know Pedro and he (and his story) is real.

If you take a quick look at the rest of my blog, you'll quickly know that this was neither an ad for any bootcamp or company, nor an attempt to 'manipulate tech news readers'.


2024: the year where you write a touching piece about someone successfully implementing a late in life career change and the top comment accuses you of being a spammer. Only way it could be better is if he said it was all generated by ChatGPT.

The internet has made us all so cynical.


Ruby's defined? keyword is an elegant way to check if a variable is defined or not and also to cache expensive operations. However, it's confusing, and a few gotchas await the new Rubyist.

In this post, we'll learn how it works and how to use it correctly to cache expensive operations returning `nil` or `false`.


In this article, we'll build a simple but complete application in plain Ruby without Rails, to get a deeper understanding and appreciation of everything Rails does for us.


Rails 7.1 ships with a handy `perform_all_later` method that lets you enqueue multiple jobs to be executed at once, reducing the round-trip to the job backend like Redis or the database.

Although it's currently supported only by Sidekiq and GoodJob (as far as I know), it provides a nice abstraction to enqueue multiple jobs at once. This post explores this method including the behind-the-scenes implementation.


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