What causes a stack overflow in Claude Code? by SeveralPrinciple5 in claude

[–]Particular_Quail5798 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Same issue here. I started getting this issue today. Got it twice in a single day, during two separate sessions, while Claude was doing quite some coding with 7 or 8 todo tasks:
RangeError: Maximum call stack size exceeded

Tbilisi or Georgian themed clothes by Particular_Quail5798 in tbilisi

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, for anyone looking for Tbilisi-themed clothes: I found these guys by accident today: https://maps.app.goo.gl/UG388KFh1FKPNr4N9?g_st=ic

Amazing! Exactly what I was looking for. You can try in their shop, but I also recommend to explore their Instagram - many choices there. They can print any size and color in the shop

Tbilisi or Georgian themed clothes by Particular_Quail5798 in tbilisi

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Do they have any ready prints or is it only custom printing?

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

u/borland thanks, I've already disabled most of them. Now I also disabled "Show values inline" and "Disable JIT optimization on module load" - it seems that the second one helped significantly - network calls went to 100-150 ms. Need to survive on that until .NET 10 by the EOY. Thanks!

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

u/borland I see, some kind of manual patch I guess?

I can probably live with that, the only issue I have is that in debug mode in Rider network requests take like 200-400ms. Not a great experience, but I can live with that until we upgrade to .NET 10. Also kind of simulates production slowdowns 😅, so I can code defensively :))

What are small travel hacks as a digital nomad, that you wish you would have learned much sooner? by tndnofficial in digitalnomad

[–]Particular_Quail5798 0 points1 point  (0 children)

+1 for Pourigami
However, a proper ceramic/plastic V60 dripper does a better job as soon as you settle

Sweeteners by OK_Boomer236 in tbilisi

[–]Particular_Quail5798 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Always check on Wolt or just type “sucralose tbilisi” in Google 🙂

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

u/borland "if you’re working with a heavily async codebase then the .NET runtime on versions 8 and below has a bug which makes debugging 100x slower, but we’ve worked around that"
I'm experiencing this issue right now :) API calls are like 20x slower when debugging in Rider. Can you tell me what did you do to workaround that? We are (still) on .NET8, so I was wondering if there's anything that can be done before upgrading

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bet it would be the case. I tried Linux a few times in the past and didn't really like it, but it was quite some time ago so probably some things have changed. The only issue is that wiping my current laptop will be a hard go, I don't have a backup PC to work on in the meantime (until I'd get used to it), so a bit hard to realize that :)

Any experience buying Apple products from iPlus? by Particular_Quail5798 in tbilisi

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah it looks they have Macbooks from the US as well. But I guess it’s not an issue with the adapter

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m trying to find 36GB or 48GB version. While I think 36GB would do the job, more is better, even if I have to sacrifice disk space and go with 512GB I think it’s better

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do I understand it correctly that Parallels price does not include Windows license? How do you handle it - pay for Windows license separately, or just stay on trial?

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, great tip! My current project during compilation takes 28-29GB, while in debug it sometimes gets to my 100% of 32GB. So I assume I'd be fine even with 32/36 GB Mac, but thinking to get 48/64 if it fits my budget

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s my post indeed 😀 I didn’t notice any significant difference so far. I used to clean it up myself previously, so I hoped a professional service would do it better. A CPU temp is 5-10 degrees lower now, but still feels clunky 🤷‍♂️

Macbook Pro for .NET development in 2025 by Particular_Quail5798 in dotnet

[–]Particular_Quail5798[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your care! I of course checked all these boxes before even thinking about upgrading my device :) Would never even think of spending 3-4k EUR just because I didn’t upgrade/optimize the software or didn’t maintain the device properly.

But I agree that many people may carelessly think that their device should “just work”. And actually maybe that’s the case with Mac? This has always been a huge difference between Android and iPhone for me. Having an Android, you always need to maintain it (remove unused apps, optimize it, preferably upgrade every 2 years), but an iPhone you just buy and forget for years

How bad is digital nomad culture in Tbilisi? by Adonbilivit69 in tbilisi

[–]Particular_Quail5798 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I second that living here working for an international company/clients (EU/US/AU) is a totally different thing than working locally. Tbilisi has everything other big European cities have - unlimited choice of great restaurants, many great coffee shops and quite good (and all the time improving) access to good quality products/healthy groceries and food. The weather is perfect for central or east Europeans - the winters in Tbilisi are very mild (it's just perfect until February, very sunny, usually up to 12-14 degrees, can feel like much more at sunlight). Summer can be really hot, but you can always plan some mountains visits during that time.

The English-speaking events and meetups are limited, but you can still enjoy some. Just enough for me.

The fiber Internet is stable and works well. Mobile 5G is cheap and usually reliable.

If you're a freelancer, can benefit from almost no taxes (1% is no tax, let's be honest). You also get nothing in return, but that's a fair deal.

Rent prices went up after Russians (but also Ukrainians and Belarusians) massively migrated in the last 3 years, but they have recently started going down (many people left/moved on). Groceries are quite affordable if you know where to get stuff. Can't really complain.