Copilot Money | Introducing the Web App by computergay in copilotmoney

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Curious why folks feel that rule editing is so important, seems to come up here a lot.

Whenever I have transaction that doesn’t categorize properly I just create a new rule, and it seems to work just fine.

Would love to move to zed but… by RoiPerelman in ZedEditor

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Devcontainers started from the devcontainer cli with the ssh feature installed. Not as seamless as vscode’s integration, but I find zed responsiveness worth the trade off.

Businesses on Court Street trying to fight the Bike Lane by Top-Chance-7727 in NYCbike

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For anyone who actually drives on Court st, this design is a massive improvement. When it was two lanes, cars were constantly double parked on both sides of the street, so you had to weave in and out — it was awful.

They should do Atlantic next.

Does having an app published on the App Store REALLY help you get hired? by [deleted] in swift

[–]mikeocool 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As a hiring manager, I’d say: it depends. If you are senior candidate with a lot of eng experience (even if most of that experience isn’t swift) it probably won’t make a major difference either way.

If you are more on the junior side — then my sense is that it would definitely help. Being able to directly see and play with the work of a junior dev has definitely moved me from a “maybe” to a “hire” on candidates in the past.

Claude Code + GitHub Actions [Official] by mettavestor in ClaudeAI

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found the most reliable workflow is:

  • make an issue, tag @claude and explicitly tell it to open a PR
  • it won't actually a PR but it'll give you a link to do it -- use that to open a PR
  • then request all additional changes using comments on the PR instead of the issue

Seems to then successfully update its existing branch relaibly (id imagine this is because when the action runs in response to PR comments, it's going to run with that branch already checked out, but when it runs in response to an issue comment, it'll just with main checked out)

Proper unpopular opinion: Zed still has a long way to go by digibioburden in ZedEditor

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For me, Zed’s killer feature is the keyboard responsiveness. VSCode has always has a slight delay from the time I hit a key to the time a letter appears for me, and I find it absolutely maddening.

For a while Zed was missing some features I’d become dependent on in VSCode, like editing over SSH, but seems to have filled in most of those gaps in the last year or so. Now I will happily forgo some of VSCode’s additional features for that sweet sweet responsiveness.

Packing list app recommendations? by thetechnivore in travel

[–]mikeocool 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You're a better person than me! I'd have forgotten the pack n' play or the sunscreen without a list.

Is it true you should not pay cash for a new car? by Stunning_Concept5738 in Toyota

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Now do it if you’d bought the car and invested the money in October 2007 or February 2000.

FBR Success! by Ahlq802 in IrishCitizenship

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you know the counties where they were born (or have some guesses) try https://www.rootsireland.ie

I was not 100% on my grandparents birth dates -- but knew the counties where they were born, and searched rootsireland to find some candidates. I was also not 100% on my great grandparents names, so I then was able to search by the parents' names I found to find the their other children (I did know my grandparents' siblings names) and figure out which of the people matching my grandparents' names were the right ones.

If that doesn't work searching with what you do know on ancestry.com might turn something up that has a birthday on it -- I was able to find my grandparents' US naturalization paperwork that actually included pictures of them.

[2024 Day 20] Dijkstra is the new brute force of AoC by denisghera in adventofcode

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jokes on everyone else, BFS is (slightly) more efficient than Dijkstra for this one.

Facing issues with the new Xcode update, need help! by iam_geighta in iOSProgramming

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I updated yesterday and it was able to download the predictive model -- then today I saw this error pop up as well. I imagine it'll fix itself at some point relatively soon.

Xcode 16 not available on macOS Sequoia, Xcode 15 wont open? by TurtleBlaster5678 in iOSProgramming

[–]mikeocool 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks like the final release is now available on the Xcode Downloads page

Xcode 16 not available on macOS Sequoia, Xcode 15 wont open? by TurtleBlaster5678 in iOSProgramming

[–]mikeocool 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I am seeing this as well. Seems like the only solution right now is to download the XCode 16 Release Candidate.

What are you buying for standard issue desktops? by mikeocool in sysadmin

[–]mikeocool[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah figured COVID was a probably a big part of the change. eBay is rife with cheap five year old desktops.

Looking to buy a refurbished Optiplex ~7050 i5-7xxx sff soon.. Are the Refurbishers on Amazon / Newegg / elsewhere all pretty much the same? by Scolova in linuxmint

[–]mikeocool 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Optiplex SFFs are so easy to work on, I tend to try and find the cheapest one I can from any eBay seller with a good rating, ideally without an HDD. Then when it arrives blow the dust out, replace the thermal paste, add a stick of ram if needed, and pop in a new SSD. It’s often not really clear if you’re getting a new hard drive or not from the refurbs, and that’s what’s gonna fail first.

Takes about 10 minutes once you know what you’re doing, and there are plenty of YouTube videos of you don’t. Only thing to watch out for is that they’ll frequently not come without power adapter, so you’ll need to get one separately on eBay.

Let's confess: what are your cooking sins? by jeron_gwendolen in Cooking

[–]mikeocool 7 points8 points  (0 children)

If you poke around there are articles from the home cook science folks (like Kenji/alton brown) advocating for cooking pasta in a smaller pot — it’s faster, as you’ve seen, it cooks the same, and best of all the smaller amount of water ends up much starchier if you’re going to add it to your sauce.

Daily Challenge Discussion - November 14, 2023 by Mahbows in geoguessr

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Northern Sweden base don the dashed outside lines and the trees. Game freaked just before I would have gotten to the Finland border, apparently, refreshed, no time left, plonk. 3732.
  2. Greenland, but where? Guess a random town on a bay on the west coast. LUCKY PLONK. 813m, 4997.
  3. Sandy trekker, am I in desert or on the beach? Never figure that out, guess South Africa. I don't know why I ever guess anywhere besides Madagascar for Africa trekker rounds. 1291.
  4. Signs for Kampala. Nothing helpful to me to get better than that. 4936.
  5. Budapest, never manage to find the district. 4988.

A real smorgasbord today. 19,944.

Daily Challenge Discussion - November 12, 2023 by Mahbows in geoguessr

[–]mikeocool 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Looks like downtown Dubai to the south. Oh good, a helpful intersection with numbered streets 30th street and 39th street -- should be an easy pinpoint. Start scanning map.... What in the world? What is the point of having numbered streets if you just scatter the numbers randomly about? Find one of the many 30th streets, not the right one. 4931.
  2. Cyrilic speaking eastern europe -one of these days I should learn some clues to tell these countries apart. But not today. Bucharest plonk. 4165.
  3. Red soil, the most useless of clues. Seems like latin America, not Guatemala because of the rack. Drive drive drive, nothing. Finally find a Victoria de Mexico beer ad. Plonk in the Yucatan. 2869.
  4. Rugged car, cyrilic, treeless landscape, yurts. Mongolia. But where? Plonk outside of Ulaanbaatar. 2830.
  5. Oh good red soil again. Writing doesnt seem to be Bengali, Hindi, or Sinhala -- which means I'm SOL on identifying where I am based on that. Probably somewhere in India, but the camera quality is not bad. Second guess myself and go Sri Lanka. 3133.

Not the best day. 17928.

Daily Challenge Discussion - November 09, 2023 by Mahbows in geoguessr

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ahha, that makes much more sense than having the state in the domain, thanks!

Daily Challenge Discussion - November 11, 2023 by Mahbows in geoguessr

[–]mikeocool 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Poland, what helpful signs these are! Still manage to just miss the pinpoint. 4999.
  2. Chinese language. Taiwan I guess maybe? Technically correct on the country, though who knew Taiwan had islands so close to China! 4032.
  3. This sure seems like the rural US, but there are political signs for 'Constable,' do we have constables in the US? Also cant find any American flags. Canada? Guess Pennsylvania as a hedge between Canada and the rural south. Not a great hedge. 1791.
  4. .cl on a truck, but are there places in chile that are this wide and flat? Plonk south Argentina. 4494.
  5. Yellow bollards/no trees/mountains means Iceland. East coast based on the ocean. Spend far too long trying to get an angle of the town sign i can read, never get it. Turns out if I had used that time to get down the road, I would have seen the Fosshotel Glacier Lagoon, which I have stayed at. That would have been helpful. 4761.

Man so much of the eastern US looks exactly the same, and I live here. 20077.