This is also how I got hooked to computers as a kid as well. The problem nowadays though is the internet and easy access to addictive internet services and games. Back then, you're stuck with what's on your PC and somehow have to make the most out of it.
His screen time is currently limited and he's been asking me to remove the limit. Guess I can let him dual boot into Mint without any screen time limit so that he can play around.
Well, I don't know. I kept telling how games like roblox are brainwashing and conditioning him into wanting to buy in-game junks. And, he still asks robuxs for this birthday.
My son's windows focused ICT curriculum is pissing me off a bit. So I guess what I wanna teach is something similar to what a kid's ICT text book would teach, except that it will be for Linux.
Huh, may be I should look for kid friendly linux books first.
That's just the difference between desktop environments and window managers. Window managers are just one part of a full featured DE. Deciding to use a specific WM means you have to install and configure several things you expects and takes for granted from complete DEs.
Turning my web app for Burmese song lyrics with guitar chords into an open source PWA songbook app. I'll try to turn it into some kind of offline available song book that you can host on github pages.
I'm half-kidding about this though. I get that the stuff you mentioned are a lot more important. These are the reasons I started exercising and using break timers.
But the thing with learning keyboard driven workflow is that you tend to develop a habit of spam pressing keys if you can't immediately think of a way to something with less keyword. Especially in vim. Because if I'm not always pressing something, I don't feel like an expert enough, damn it! So I resorted to spamming hjkl, lol.
When my RSI problems start to develop. I had to really focus and change that habit to slow down and think of a way to press less keys. But still I stopped using vim key equivalents on browsers though, mouse scrolling relaxes my fingers a bit more than key pressing.
Not and AI expert but I've never been convinced by AI that's trained on human provided data. It's just gonna be garbage in, garbage out.
To get something substantially useful from AI, it needs to be... axiomatic, I guess.
A few years ago, there was Alpha Zero learning only the rules of chess but within just a few hours, it learned all the chess openings/theories that took human chess masters centuries to formulate. It even has it's own effective opening lines that used to be considered wasteful/unsound before.
Granted chess game rules and win conditions are relatively simple compared to real life problems. So may be, it's too early for general purpose AI research to billions into.
I've seen too many guys, even those in "respectable" positions like executives or club captains, just leave their porn tabs open before asking me for some help with their phones.
When I asked them to open up their browser they would straight up open it up to a previously opened porn tab and start to panic. And somehow, the porn site that opened is always XNXX, lol. Pornhubs' banned here and I guess XNXX just become popular instead.
Where I'm from used to be pretty much a backwater country without any official access to western software. No credit card to purchase online, nothing. So we all use pirated software. 2000s were like the golden age of pirated softwate. I messed around with pirated/cracked software a lot when I was in uni, then I got hit with ransomware and lost all my assignments.
So I started giving opensource a try. I didn't know before that open source was actually a thing until I overhear some of my friends arguing about windows and linux. This was around 2007, so linux desktop is still a bit abysmal. I think tux guitar is probably the first opem source I used because pirating guitar pro starts to get too tedious. I started replacing pirated softwares I used to have with open source alternatives.
IE with firefox
Internet Download Manager with jDownloader.
Guitar Pro with Tux Guitar.
Some text editor with the name I forgot with Notepad++
Then I eventually moved on to linux, which took quite a bit long though, since I used to be a .NET developer.
Honestly, a lot of third world countries could benefit tremendously from open source software but we were all mentally locked in to windows, since youth. Most training center here only teaches windows. Even recent school curriculum seems to be focused on windows. We got so used to pirated software that's actually quite expensive to buy legitimately and people gets fussy if they couldn't use it. Such a shame...
Hello, fellow goofy developer.