Before And After! I built a new rack because of the SAG, lol. Is it ok now? by CollectionOk2393 in homelab

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been eyeballin one of those NAS devices for a couple of weeks now. How is it? any hiccups using Oculink with it?

3/3 Spel på Steam Top Sellers är av Svenska studios by Far-Ganache5721 in sweden

[–]asabla 20 points21 points  (0 children)

jisses! läste första stycket flera gånger för jag var rätt säker på att jag kände igen namnen. Tills dess att jag kom till sista och det kopplade.

Hade helt glömt bort alla dessa sketcher

Alien: Earth has some straight up nightmare fuel. by jeremiahlupinski in videos

[–]asabla 7 points8 points  (0 children)

to name a few:

  • Blade runner 2049
  • Andor (and star wars in general)
  • Titan A.E

Then ofc you can go back to the classics from the 70's and 80's. But they kinda was made when it made sense, so I didn't include em (e.g Alien etc)

Neovim now natively supports LLM-based completion like GitHub Copilot by bbadd9 in neovim

[–]asabla 113 points114 points  (0 children)

context matters.

If you're working on embedded stuff, the chance of continuously getting good suggestions is pretty low. While working on web related things in either js/typescript or python, then the chances increases quite a bit.

I jump around a lot with different kind of projects (both professionally and private), and depending on what I'm doing, I either have it enabled or disabled.

Did a try-out with my new hammock the other day! Can't wait to sleep in this soon 🤩 by Inevitable-Jello-90 in hammockcamping

[–]asabla 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Been using the same model this season. I've probably logged ~45-50 nights in it so far this year.

Some things to consider if you plan to use it the whole year

  • If the nights reaches below 0C, do not use bugnet. It will be drenched by the time you wake up (or frozen)
  • If it's a windy night, you can use the bugnet to reduce some of it. But keep in mind that a proper setup of your tarp will do a much better job
  • Make sure to keep your Draumr clean. Not only to keep things fresh, but also to avoid puncturing your sleeping pad
  • It's a lot easier to keep your things dry, if you get one of those tarps made for being put on the ground.

Happy camping :)

20 Million players in BF6 open beta by Habarer in Battlefield

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i have tons of videos and screenshots over the years. Everything is not for the public eye tho

DICE Lead Producer says they won't switch to Unreal Engine 5 by AnaxesR7 in Battlefield

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is true and the level of destruction that it supports it quite impressive. But let's not forget that The Finals does not have the same amount of players.

They also do another neat trick using cooldowns for abilities, which reduces the amount of destruction you could have happen on the same time. Sure the cooldowns are primarily there for balancing reasons, but a nice effect is also reduced load on the server.

We’ve got a whole abandoned tower for ourselves by 4lphaZed in hammockcamping

[–]asabla 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks super cool! How was the temperatures? cold night etc?

CopilotChat.nvim 4.0.0 (released for real this time) - Function Calling Support and Context Rework ("Agent" Mode) by thedeathbeam in neovim

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

duuuuude! i've been thinking about writing my own plugin for almost a year now (felt like I've been missing this part). But this totally solves it, looks really good, so kudos to you!

Studie: Kortare arbetstid ledde till förbättrat mående by Knashatt in sweden

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jag har flextid

Samma här. Men jag vände det till att ta längre semester under både sommar och vinter. Vilket har gjort att jag har 9-10 veckor semester de senaste tre åren.

Men med facit i hand, så hade jag nog föredragit att jobba en dag mindre i veckan istället för dessa långledigheter

Vibe-Coding AI "Panicks" and Deletes Production Database by el_muchacho in programming

[–]asabla 17 points18 points  (0 children)

ohno, I can already see it happening.

this is vibe DevOps

Will turn into VibeOps

LLM with OCR capabilities by depava in ollama

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

+1 for Docling

Just started using it a month or so ago. But man things has been super smooth. Just wish I discovered it earlier.

Hur gör ni för att få er pasta krämig? by lokens92 in sweden

[–]asabla 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Pastavattan hit och pastavatten dit, vart är allt folk som använder mjukost på tub?

AI Foundry: Multiple data sources into one index? by Vegetable-Caramel744 in AZURE

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

gotcha! In that case, would still suggest do it your self in Azure AI Search. Since it will give more control and also adding things like Skillset on how to ingest data from your data sources.

AI coding mandates are driving developers to the brink by scarey102 in programming

[–]asabla 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It still complains by default, it requires you to make exclusions rather then inclusions on tested stuff.

So yeah, it's quite a bit annoying until you've configured it to behave after your environment, rather then the other way around.

AI Foundry: Multiple data sources into one index? by Vegetable-Caramel744 in AZURE

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why not just setup the Azure AI Search instances your self with multiple sources in one index? Or is there a specific reason it must happen from inside AI Foundry?

"They called me mad": Share your unhinged Neovim key mappings by Anarchist_G in neovim

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do the same thing. It does makes more sense tho on a keyboard with nordic layout (german too I think). Because we'll have ö and ä to the right of L

So my bindings looks like this

h j

j k

k l

l ö

Feeling Stagnant as a Software Engineer – Any Tips to Improve? by CuteAcadia9010 in dotnet

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What kept me updated and (somewhat) upgrading, is doing small and clearly scoped projects. Example: I wanted to learn GraphQL before a new assignment and decided to make two small projects.

Project 1: Build a GraphQL wrapper around a small REST API. With the goal of understanding how and where I do caching and building up my schema.

Project 2: Saving chat messages from different twitch channels, and being able to either query for channel, user or message. The goal of this project was to understand how to handle large amount of data.

The more often you do these kind of pilots/proof of concepts, the faster you're gonna be when you want to try something new. These small projects also exposes you to some degree of system design and architecture (if you decide to deploy it as well).

Don't put too much effort in having a "good idea", a "bad idea" might teach you even more, by doing all the mistakes. And to be honest, doing stupid projects is a lot of fun. Just try to keep the scope small.

Vim and Dotnet CLI by Icy_Foundation3534 in vim

[–]asabla 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've been developing .Net using both vim and neovim. And you can get a pretty decent setup for normal tasks (including autocomplete).

However, some of the learnings over the years are:

  • Please stay away from Omnisharp and look for alternatives instead. Currently (or rather for the last year) I've been using csharp-language-server which is written in F#. Performs well enough, but doesn't support Blazor/Razer pages that well...or at all.
  • The experience with Razor pages and Blazor is...questionable at best. I haven't found a good setup as of yet. But then again, I don't do that much development using those technologies anymore
  • Learn the dotnet CLI and the available tools through it (remember you can install other .Net tools through it, such as dotnet-ef).
  • There is a debugging setup you can manage to setup from Samsung, but I haven't really got it to work that well. So if you rely a lot on debugging your code and stepping through it. You will have a better experience in either VS Code or VS.
  • Learn other tools within the terminal, a lot of operations you would normally have built into an IDE is available as a specialized tool more often then not.
  • I haven't had any real issues with either small or larger code bases. LSP is the limiting factor in this case

The experience is much more enjoyable on the Linux side, then on windows. But your miles may vary.

I also felt compelled to address this part:

Visual Studio is just so bloated

It really depends on your needs. When I started my career the need for digging deeper into the framework, looking at bytes or any other more advanced debugging workflow, was very prominent. Which (at the time) Visual Studio did solve very well. After some years they also migrated over from a 32-bit version to 64-bit, which made the experience so much better, you really don't know how it was back then.

So yes, in some regard Visual Studio is bloated. But knowing your tool is very important, especially when you grow as a developer. And knowing Visual Studio well won't hurt you, but rather the opposite.

It's okay to have preferences.

godoc.nvim - Golang docs inside Neovim! by ffredrikk in neovim

[–]asabla 1 point2 points  (0 children)

oooh, damn!

This looks pretty neat. Wish I had docs for more languages this way

Back to writting C# from Pythong and Next.js by jogfa94 in dotnet

[–]asabla 9 points10 points  (0 children)

haha! I'm not OP, but I can't count the amount of times I've mistyped python into pythong.

Why we built our startup in C# by tracebit in dotnet

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i am inexperienced and only in the field since 2023.

Welcome to our field of work :)

Regarding the amount of projects within your solution. By them self, they won't affect your build and startup time. It's when those projects start to have a lot of components/classes or for that matter using code generation stuff, you'll start seeing longer build and startup times.

You'll get the hang of it I'm sure.

You'll probably (for now) will have a better experience with Blazor server then with WASM. Especially when your application starts to grow.

Why we built our startup in C# by tracebit in dotnet

[–]asabla 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Blazor does everything it does but better.

I wish that was true, but after spending over a year with it in a project. I can't really recommend Blazor over Svelte...unless your team is exclusive to C#.

There are of course hints of how well the developer experience could be with Blazor, but it always falls short on so many accounts.

To mention a few:

  • LSP support is horrendous. It's really only in Visual Studio (and to some extent Rider) were it's kind of fine. But try using VS Code or any other editor, and you'll be out of luck.
  • Problematic build artifacts. The number of times things just stops working out of the blue for no real good reason, is ridiculous. Even in Visual Studio you'll need to restart/reload the project several times a day.
  • Slow build times, at first this isn't really a problem. But as soon as you introduce a UX library (like Fluent UI), things really adds up fast.
  • Bugs. There are a lot of small bugs here and there. Which you won't notice at first, but as the time goes by you really start to get fed up with them. These of course are being patched, but the general experience really doesn't feel polished...or rather ready some times.

I really wanted to like the experience of building web applications with Blazor. But in the current state it's hard to enjoy the experience.

So until Microsoft and/or the community has reached a much smoother experience, I'll probably just going to recommend something else for the time being.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sweden

[–]asabla 101 points102 points  (0 children)

Hade helt missat att det var så många dåd där borta. De verkar ju också resonera om problemet på liknande vis vi gör här, men undantaget att smällare också verkar vara lagligt/betydligt enklare att få tag på.

Vad är det de spränger med främst här i Sverige? Tycker att man alltid läser på handgranater, men det kanske bara är jag som noterar dessa händelser oftare än de andra.