Des Moines Register (Iowa): Final results from the 2024 Iowa Republican caucus. Looks like some guy named Ryan Binkley was running as well as the more familiar names….interesting…
Micro.Blog
There are 331 posts filed in Micro.Blog (this is page 27 of 34).
Colin Walker points to Misu talking about writing consistently, and I love this quote from Colin: “if you don’t do the things you want to get better at then you never will and there’s no point moaning about it.”. I also needed to hear that!
Darek Kay: Style your RSS feed – tutorial on using XSL(T) for styling a RSS feed (via Sacha Chua)
This video shows using Emacs agenda mode and org-mode along with customized configuration to support a fairly detailed workflow for the Getting Things Done method.
I enjoyed watching this, I will need to pick one of these and try it out.
What to do with too many open browser tabs
For me, I tend to open browser tabs when I am using my RSS reader River5 through my reading list app. I then keep the tabs open until I read the tab, and save it somehow if I want to keep the URL. For most of my browsing life, the “save” action is to copy the URL to a link dump file. I have used text files, Libre Office word documents, and a notes app on my phone. I used to let these files get really big, then I decided to stop doing that and creating a new file at the beginning of the month. You can probably tell that I have quite a collection of links. And, after copying links to the file, I rarely (IF EVER) would go back to those links (so mostly a write-only file). In 2022, I did try using a “zettlekasten” approach to collecting links by category (using an OPML file and a static website). However, I eventually went back to link dumps…
This weekend, with a lot of cold weather coming, anticipating I would not be going anywhere, I decided to bite the bullet and review all my open tabs, and create posts on my website for each link I wanted to save. If you are one of my 3-4 regular readers, I apologize for the link flood. I added categories for each link (all of them also have the “Links” category), started with using the Status post type, then switched to Link post type later in the day. I will be finishing the tab review today, then hope to keep up with adding links to my site. I will have to see how I like the look on the website (in other words, if I want to create a separate view for posts with the category “Links”), but I am hoping to give this a good try for the rest of the month.
Let me know if you have any ideas/techniques for managing links that you want to save!
SageMath: SageMath is a free open-source mathematics software system licensed under the GPL. It builds on top of many existing open-source packages: NumPy, SciPy, matplotlib, Sympy, Maxima, GAP, FLINT, R and many more. Mission: Creating a viable free open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica and Matlab.
ddrake: Choose tools that can’t be taken away from you: a manifesto – it’s risky to rely on tools that can be taken away from you – linked from a Mastodon post on looking for Evernote alternatives
Greg Wilson/The Third Bit: What’s The Scratch of the Social Sciences? – how to teach the social sciences to programmers like the Scratch language teaches programming to non-programmers (links to an essay on inessential weirdness of open source development from 2016 – fascinating!).
Chris McLeod: Blogging is where it’s at, again – reviews blogging services (including Micro.blog) and OPML usage in the wild