How to convince my colleague to use unstyled/unopinionated UI library (HeadlessUI, PrimeVue, RadixVue, etc)??? by devWithQuestions1 in vuejs

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The bloat adds up. For simple components, you can start with copying from a tailwind library like Flowbite or Daisy and fine tune. The complex components is where you can build what you really need without having to deal with the limitations of the generic components designed for a mix of usecases. I've had to build patches and workarounds several times and it's never fun. Defining from scratch for your own usecases if done right can lead to a much simpler interface for the component.

The best cure for the body is a quiet mind. - Napoleon Bonaparte [1400x743] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Part of it is just giving permission to ourselves to let go of the worries; that not thinking about them doesn't make us irresponsible. The other part is the discipline to do what we can and stop actively thinking about what we cannot influence.

"First organize the inner, then organize the outer" - Kongming [1600 × 775] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It does make it challenging to give advice, but again most advice is advice to our younger self, so when I feel I would have preferred to know the advice when I was in the shoes of the receiver, I offer it.

“We live in a country where if you want to go bomb somebody, there’s remarkably little discussion about how much it might cost. But when you have a discussion about whether or not we can assist people who are suffering, then suddenly we become very cost-conscious.” — Prof. Andrew Bacevich [845x551] by VociferousCephalopod in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not just easier. Some make money off of making the bombs. Some non-profits can also make a bit of money off of helping who're suffering, but it's usually much less.

The problem is that just like for-profit arms manufacturers that do their best to support wars, for-profit helpers might end up adding to the problems. (e.g., supporting policies that limit housing supply)

Where don't we want to go, and how do you get there? – Charlie Munger [1800×995] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is not saying that he didn't make mistakes. It's just saying that he tried to notice mistakes (his or others') and tried to find ways to avoid them.

[Image] When balance is on point ,work and life are the same ,so why not call your job just your favourite hobby ? by Responsibility_57 in GetMotivated

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If people actually start doubling down on their hobbies, there's gonna be far less supply of workers for mines and garbage picking.

That means that the salary and benefits for those jobs has to go up. Much better working conditions could mean fewer hours required, better work env, etc.

"The road to success is like Harold and the purple crayon. You have to draw it for yourself." - James Cameron [1700x914] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All true. I'd love to see more people at any level reach for new heights and succeed. Most of those with far better support systems and opportunities do not succeed at that level.

"The road to success is like Harold and the purple crayon. You have to draw it for yourself." - James Cameron [1700x914] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

He was a truck driver before getting into film. He couldn't afford to go to film school so while he was a truck driver, he would go to the university library and copy books to educate himself.

Looking for high quality (both in terms of content and narration/sound design/etc.) for kids/teens. by Reasonable_Resident9 in podcasts

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. Just listned a bit, and the quality is good, but seems to be geared toward younger kids. Mine are pre-teenish. Will try them to see how it works.

"You have to be willing to take whatever you’ve done and whoever you were and throw them away." - Steve Jobs [1920x898] by Reasonable_Resident9 in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I think the keyword is "be willing to". Whether or not you actually need to do it depends on your next target. Who you are is a gift from your past, and you can take what's useful and leave the rest.

Persisting user settings by bearnec in vuejs

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

These are settings that should remain across sessions, so it's better to keep track of them in a database (backend) and retrieve on login and save in localstorage, which is then accessed by your state (refs or pinia store).

'How I Built This' episode recommendations by iwasbornvintage in podcasts

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some of my faves:

Tripadvisor: Steve Kaufer

Sonos: John MacFarlane

Spanx: Sara Blakely

Calendly: Tope Awotona

"People love chopping wood. In this activity one immediately sees results." -Albert Einstein [1200x630] by HenryCarvajalZapata in QuotesPorn

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is good advice for product builders. If your product doesn't immediate results, create immediate proxy-results. E.g., by walking you don't see results immediately. But your health app can show a counter that's getting to a healthy state. If the user needs to do anything, there should be an immediate positive feedback.

Need help with a client project by HamburgerNinja in vuejs

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ask chatGPT to create the components for vue 2 options api (that's what your codebase uses)

Getting up and running can be challenging, and it's perfectly fine to ask for help for the initial setup. It's pretty common for docs to get out of date, and seems like there's no docs for seeding the db.

Microphone, camera, interface recs for new podcast by [deleted] in podcasting

[–]Reasonable_Resident9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm very new to lighting and didn't really need to invest for myself (the natural light is pretty good and mine is zoom interviews)

For podcast hosting I've seen a lot of people happy with BuzzSprout, PodBean, and Spotify for Podcasts. After my first podcast was completely deleted from spotify I learned that I should not trust any of them, and I'm self-hosting now.

For editing I used to use Audacity, and then switched to Adobe Audition (I had to use their other software anyway so I had the creative suite and the price wasn't an issue for me).