When I was young, before my first IT job, I used to love playing with Xen, distcc and watching my desktop pc scroll compiler output for days rebuilding my X-Windows. I fell in love with the idea of Beowulf clusters and Gestalt computing.
Kubernetes combines a lot of all of that stuff so I'm very lucky to both work and spend my free time on what would be a hobby anyway.
Started a vlog to show my journey as a developer and freelancer. The videos are about developing, starting and maintaining your own company, meetup & conference reports and improving productivity.
It's still in its infancy so feedback is always appreciated!
I’ve tried to abstract my “blog” into a personal aggregator that provides a central place to see (and caches) the activity I want to share with other people.
I’m working on a pretty major overhaul for the next version and I’m considering making it into a SaaS product since there seems to be no equivalent options that don’t require you self hosting someone’s open source product (with the associated maintenance that this will incur) that may or may not continue being updated to support new services (which was what motivates my work on the next version)
I wrote one blog post that became a top post here on HN (2nd top post with over 500 points and 100 comments) [1].
My blog can be found here [2] ... I write about ... all kinds of stuff but mainly technology, data science, and stuff ... I'd like to write more about management and leadership but I feel like I lack the credibility to talk about it.
Blog a little about some of the programming I do in my free time. Most recent post I wrote was about using first class functions for idiomatic query building in Go [1].
I found it difficult to learn how to dress properly when starting with zero knowledge on the subject, and every article and website I could find on the subject was always a "How to be the best dressed person in the room". I started this blog to help people take the first steps in dressing properly.
I write about design and code and the intersection between the two (or at least I try to).
The most difficult thing for me is maintaining the blog updated with new content, as every time I write a post I usually feel the need to redesign the whole thing altogether
Still need to turn this into a proper blog but you can find me at https://dev.to/carlmungazi writing about my journey rebuilding different parts of the frontend stack (think framework, testing library, build tool etc).
Still quite unfinished, but my site https://lightmeta.com has a couple of posts that might interest HN readers, in the Blog section and the Perspectives section.
When I was young, before my first IT job, I used to love playing with Xen, distcc and watching my desktop pc scroll compiler output for days rebuilding my X-Windows. I fell in love with the idea of Beowulf clusters and Gestalt computing.
Kubernetes combines a lot of all of that stuff so I'm very lucky to both work and spend my free time on what would be a hobby anyway.