Hi! I'm a dev with > 10 years of experience and I've been laid off twice in the past few years. Both times I've spent more than 5 months without a job. It's not just you, hang in there. The current market conditions are tough with lots of layoffs in the industry and resume writing and reading getting automated.
I'd say keep your friends close - make sure they know you're looking, frequently, as you've noticed an internal referral can speed things up; and keep busy - working on maybe some personal projects, or contributing to things that are out there can help keep you sharp, motivated and doesn't hurt to have on that resume.
You can start looking at job aggregator sites, not just career pages. there's indeed, builtin, etc etc etc. I personally also am a big fan of the hacker news monthly who's hiring thread. It's frequently a good way of getting in touch with folks who are hiring directly.
The & is an indicator to most shells to run this command in "the background". Try and run ( sleep 10; echo hi ) & - you'll see you get your shell prompt back, where you can run more commands, but 10 second later you'll see that 'hi' come through. 'blocking' is the default behavior, if you don't add the & you're still going get the hi in ten seconds, but you don't get a prompt because your shell's execution is blocked until your command is done.
The doc here is indicating that you havea choice between autostart_blocking.sh and autostart.sh, the latter of which would be run with a &. They could have expressed this better.
As for why your script didn't work, I'd try executing it in a terminal to see what error message comes up.
As you switch, I would highly recommend you purchase a domain for yourself, and redirect email from it to your new provider. This separates your "identity" from your email host, so you can switch the latter without having to go through this process again.
both mobile and desktop have the plaintext notes in a sqlite db. they're "easy enough" to export if you're bailing on the app, but not to regularly switch between two different apps
Comparing idioms is fun. "Great minds think alike" has an equivalent which is literally translated as "Idiots have similar thoughts". Kinda reflective of the cultures too: self congratulating vs self deprecating.
the macos file browser, Finder, lets you set a background for a folder, move file icons around to arbitrary positions, other shenanigans. in order for this to work across systems on removable storage media and network mounts, they have this.
it's mostly fixed now, after convincing fxtec to send me a new USB board, but in the time it took to do that, I've moved on to a flippy razr phone. for now, single handed use beats having the keyboard for me
I'd like to see this fix the most annoying part about subtitles, timing. find transcript/any subs on the Internet and have the AI align it with the audio properly.
I think we're closer with hardware than software. the xreal/rokid category of hmds are comfortable enough to wear all day, and I don't mind a cable running from behind my ear under a clothes layer to a phone or mini PC in my pocket. Unfortunately you still need to byo cameras to get the overlays appearing in the correct points in space, but cameras are cheap, I suspect these glasses will grow some cameras in the next couple of iterations.
There's no way you're "covering up" an antenna. Frequently the antenna is the body of the car itself.
Look up the fuse box layout of the car model you're interested in to check if the communication system is on a separate fuse that you can pull without disabling anything else useful.
check out Supreme Commander, it's a game from the erra of good RTSes, and I think has some of the features you're taking about, e.g. beforehand of multiple bases, automation... you can do things like produce x units, send them to this area, have them start doing this patrol, etc. You can pause the game, to make these orders too. My favorite gimmick though, is that the map is zoomable, from a classic here's your dudes and tanks view, up into a strategic view with icons representing everything. This also opens up the ability to have units be different sizes. vehicles are appropriately larger than infantry, and you can have giant mechs to which other units are literally ants.
Hi! I'm a dev with > 10 years of experience and I've been laid off twice in the past few years. Both times I've spent more than 5 months without a job. It's not just you, hang in there. The current market conditions are tough with lots of layoffs in the industry and resume writing and reading getting automated.
I'd say keep your friends close - make sure they know you're looking, frequently, as you've noticed an internal referral can speed things up; and keep busy - working on maybe some personal projects, or contributing to things that are out there can help keep you sharp, motivated and doesn't hurt to have on that resume.
You can start looking at job aggregator sites, not just career pages. there's indeed, builtin, etc etc etc. I personally also am a big fan of the hacker news monthly who's hiring thread. It's frequently a good way of getting in touch with folks who are hiring directly.