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537 results for “nurkiewicz”

  1. Fascinating talk with and contributors Jean-Baptiste Kempf and Kieran Kunhya:

    > "And everything we’ve just said in the past couple of minutes, every sentence is someone’s lifetime’s work. There are books about- … every sentence"

    lexfridman.com/ffmpeg-transcri

  2. Fascinating talk with #ffmpeg and #VLC contributors Jean-Baptiste Kempf and Kieran Kunhya:

    > "And everything we’ve just said in the past couple of minutes, every sentence is someone’s lifetime’s work. There are books about- … every sentence"

    lexfridman.com/ffmpeg-transcri

  3. Fascinating talk with #ffmpeg and #VLC contributors Jean-Baptiste Kempf and Kieran Kunhya:

    > "And everything we’ve just said in the past couple of minutes, every sentence is someone’s lifetime’s work. There are books about- … every sentence"

    lexfridman.com/ffmpeg-transcri

  4. Fascinating talk with #ffmpeg and #VLC contributors Jean-Baptiste Kempf and Kieran Kunhya:

    > "And everything we’ve just said in the past couple of minutes, every sentence is someone’s lifetime’s work. There are books about- … every sentence"

    lexfridman.com/ffmpeg-transcri

  5. Fascinating talk with #ffmpeg and #VLC contributors Jean-Baptiste Kempf and Kieran Kunhya:

    > "And everything we’ve just said in the past couple of minutes, every sentence is someone’s lifetime’s work. There are books about- … every sentence"

    lexfridman.com/ffmpeg-transcri

  6. is simple! To copy ("yank"?) the entire buffer into clipboard, just hit [Esc] for Normal mode, followed by `ggyG`! ("go to the beginning of the buffer, yank selection, go to the end of buffer".) Of course you must first add this to use your OSes clipboard...:

    ```
    vim.opt.clipboard = "unnamedplus"
    ```

  7. I switched from #vscode to #Zed and I was blown away that the editor can still be responsive in 2020s. Now I moved further to #NeoVIM. It's obviously even more responsive. Downside: it responds very quickly to my random key presses and I have no idea what I'm doing

  8. I switched from to and I was blown away that the editor can still be responsive in 2020s. Now I moved further to . It's obviously even more responsive. Downside: it responds very quickly to my random key presses and I have no idea what I'm doing

  9. I switched from #vscode to #Zed and I was blown away that the editor can still be responsive in 2020s. Now I moved further to #NeoVIM. It's obviously even more responsive. Downside: it responds very quickly to my random key presses and I have no idea what I'm doing

  10. I switched from #vscode to #Zed and I was blown away that the editor can still be responsive in 2020s. Now I moved further to #NeoVIM. It's obviously even more responsive. Downside: it responds very quickly to my random key presses and I have no idea what I'm doing

  11. I switched from #vscode to #Zed and I was blown away that the editor can still be responsive in 2020s. Now I moved further to #NeoVIM. It's obviously even more responsive. Downside: it responds very quickly to my random key presses and I have no idea what I'm doing

  12. Pretty cool to see how Code fails to fetch web page (HTTP 403) multiple times, faking different user agents in `curl`, to finally succeed by just starting in real browser

  13. Pretty cool to see how #Claude Code fails to fetch web page (HTTP 403) multiple times, faking different user agents in `curl`, to finally succeed by just starting #Puppeteer in real browser

  14. Pretty cool to see how #Claude Code fails to fetch web page (HTTP 403) multiple times, faking different user agents in `curl`, to finally succeed by just starting #Puppeteer in real browser

  15. Pretty cool to see how #Claude Code fails to fetch web page (HTTP 403) multiple times, faking different user agents in `curl`, to finally succeed by just starting #Puppeteer in real browser

  16. Pretty cool to see how #Claude Code fails to fetch web page (HTTP 403) multiple times, faking different user agents in `curl`, to finally succeed by just starting #Puppeteer in real browser

  17. Colors in HTTP server access logs is something I had no idea is so useful! Good work, #Go #Gin framework

  18. Colors in HTTP server access logs is something I had no idea is so useful! Good work, framework

  19. Colors in HTTP server access logs is something I had no idea is so useful! Good work, #Go #Gin framework

  20. Colors in HTTP server access logs is something I had no idea is so useful! Good work, #Go #Gin framework

  21. Colors in HTTP server access logs is something I had no idea is so useful! Good work, #Go #Gin framework

  22. These summaries are ridiculously good!

  23. The podcast with Dave Plummer (most known for creating Windows Task Manager) was a joy to listen: lexfridman.com/dave-plummer/

  24. The #LexFridman podcast with Dave Plummer (most known for creating Windows Task Manager) was a joy to listen: lexfridman.com/dave-plummer/

  25. The #LexFridman podcast with Dave Plummer (most known for creating Windows Task Manager) was a joy to listen: lexfridman.com/dave-plummer/

  26. The #LexFridman podcast with Dave Plummer (most known for creating Windows Task Manager) was a joy to listen: lexfridman.com/dave-plummer/

  27. The #LexFridman podcast with Dave Plummer (most known for creating Windows Task Manager) was a joy to listen: lexfridman.com/dave-plummer/