- you walk into another room, but can’t remember why you’re there.
- You go downstairs to grab something, do 5 other unrelated things, go back upstairs and immediately remember why you went down in the first place.
Me: when you’re ready let’s do the thing we’d agreed we wanted to do around now.
Them: okay. (drops everything)
Me: okay…I knew you’re in the middle of something, I can wait 5 minutes.
Them: ugg, no, its fine let’s just go now.
(Later with someone else)
Them: Ugg, I always feel rushed to do things with [me].
Other: you know he’ll will wait for you right, its not a big deal.
Them: I know, but I feel bad. I dont like wasting his time…(he doesn’t have a lot of it left).
I like Simple Note.
I’m not sure about real time collab, but I know you can share notes.
They do have a github page. Having to make an account and store notes server side is a big minus, but it is the only one I’ve found to
Edit.
Digging into it a bit more. Seems they started in 2008 and were aquired by Automattic, in 2013. Same people behind WordPress. Oddly enough, Simple Note is not listed in their list of products.
Simple Note client side is GPL-2.0 The server is proprietary
They say on their own site, don’t store sensitive data. But that’s good advice for any online service.
Found it. Thanks
Some new features, bug fixes, and ongoing support.
It is a new application so you do have to set it up fresh - don’t switch until you have a bit of spare time. Missed the back and restore button in settings.
Personally I’m on one of the fork’s beta versions. I’m waiting for the f-droid release so I get updates.
It looks a lot cleaner now.
The body text seems too light still, but that might be my phone screen. It should be solid black.
Only One change from here I would strongly recommend making is the blue “city” text black.
Treat blue and bold text as your ‘highlighter’, there to help someone quickly navigate to the important sections of the page. City is not important. Your use of varriying font sizes and bullet lists is great for page navigation.
If I was going to use color, I’d highlight the jobs before the city name/git link.
The rest is personal taste.
Personally, I think the blue headers is enough. It might get to too blue if you color job titles as well. You don’t need a separate monochrome version, the dark blue will show as black if it happens to be printed in B&W. You should also test print your resume in B&W. I find easier to spot errors on paper.
Edits as I spot more little things.
(Also there’s an extra space in the second skill name - Event Bus)
(You also have space to make programming languages one line. At first glace I though you had a blank section for “languages”. Could probably just say “programming”, but I’m not in that field so maybe that’s frowned upon?)
(In education, you have an example line underneath the university name, what is that line for? I would put the degree in that space, not off to the side. That’s technicaly more important that the university it self, but it’s probably “improper form” to list that above the uni name. (or whatever some one snoby would say).
(One last thing, you don’t really need your full street address. Its unlikely anyone will mail you a response, and its just as likely you’ll have to enter it into the application form anyways. City will suffice.)
(One last last thing, if you’re going to give yourself titles at the top, you better show them in your expirence section. (I know this is just an example template and I am being incredibly picky) but I don’t see architect anyware in the actual resume. That communicates to me you’re just calling yourself related titles hoping one sticks)
This looks good.
A few unsolicited nit-picky suggestions;
Bob’s Auto | City, ST | 2017-2021
Education does not need so many details (if relevant to job, include specific courses and projects). Grad date can be omitted to help obfuscate you’re age (a grad from 2024 is probably inexpirenced, while a 1967 grad is going to be retiring soon).
Two lines is all you need;
B.S. Computer Science, minor electrical enginnering
I think they are suggesting the abality to reset 2fa for a service if they have access to your email.
Let’s say your database contains your email service, and bank account without 2fa. Let’s also assume they got acess to your email through a sham site that had you type credentials in and 2fa.
Hacker gets database.
They can login into your email and use the recovery code the bank send to your email for “lost my 2fa”. (And delete the mail notifications as they come in, hopefully before you catch on)
A bank (should) have additional steps such as phone number, or a real recovery key you were supposed to write down, but a random online store or entertainment site will probably will just reset the 2fa and the hacker can go from there.
Realsisticlly we should be using at least 3 password database files with different master passwords for better security.
However in practice, that is a pain in the ass and if someome has taken the time to breach your 1 specific database instead of going after easier targets, they probably have all your databases.
Going to preface this one with an /s
You can hire a maid to assist you around the house. She can turn on and off the lights via voice command, open the blinds in the morning, lock the door when you leave, adjust the heat throught the day, open the garage door when you pull in, and so much more. You don’t even need a camera to protect against pirates, for when a package arrives - she can bring it inside right away.
The privacy implications are amazing compared to other options. There’s only one person watching you and you know exactly who it is. She won’t sell your data to “third party partners”. Most you have to worry about is her gossiping about you with her friends who are sick of hearing about some random dude on Lemmy all day.
Traditionally, there is a subscription fee. If you don’t want to pay, you’re best (leagl) opton is to have a kid and train them well. That will last you until you’re at the age when you can’t stand up and walk to the light switch, but then you can upgrade to a nurse paid for by the child who is too busy training their own child to bother with you.
Looks like a good option to start with before rainmeter, it stinks that cal sync is part of the paid option, but paid is only 10£ lifetime. I’ll see how it goes.
I’m not worried about, the more complex option is more fun anyways.
Ah, I forgot about Rainmeter…the most complex option for something seemingly so simple. I’m honestly surprised that a calandar widget isn’t a more common thing.
Whoever took that screenshot needs a better spot for their passwords and shit. Those should not be mixed.
I started on the windows 95/XP, but still hit Ctrl+s after every few sentences. It’s just part of typing to me. It confuses google docs when I try to save out of habit.
Am I the only one who doesn’t use automatic updates for apps? I like to read the change logs, both out of mild curiosity, and to know if an app has a “major UI update”
Only mention of rust: “Standalone Rust component experiment of a notes implementation in Thunderbird”
Other planned features of note
You mean I shouldn’t have a two page essay summarizing my entire life? /s
In all seriousness, its unfortunate how many people are mislead by school “career coaches” into making resumes and cover letters filled with fluff.
Here’s some things I remember;
Instead of
Bobs Auto Shop
Accountant, 2019-2022
Lead with
Accountant
Bobs Auto Shop, 2019-2022
It even says “currently unavailable”!
Come up with your own ideas EA.
I’m going to copy paste a reply I left somewhere else. This was for iOS AI, I’m unsure what the implemention for macOS is. If they are scanning everything then I do not support it.
From what I saw,
MS Recall is a 24/7 AI monitor system that captures everything you look at and saves it for later. They didn’t even do the bare minimum for protecting the data, it was just dumped in an unencytped folder where anyone get wholesale access to the data. All trust has been lost.
Apple is using AI as a tool to improve specific tasks/features that a user invokes. Things like assistant queries and the new calculator. They have said some promising things in regards to privacy, specificly with the use of ChatGPT - any inquiry sent to ChatGPT will ask the user permission first and obscure their IP. This shows they care enough to try, they have not lost our trust - but we remain skeptical.
If apple tries the same thing by scanning everything wholesale, then that’s getting over shadowed by the promises made by the implentaion on the much more popular iOS.