In my blog post about Emacs keybindings https://www.wilfred.me.uk/blog/2018/01/06/the-emacs-guru-guide-to-key-bindings/ I mention the 'Emacs Guru Test'.
It's a cute way of seeing how well you know Emacs, so I'm pleased to have shared it. I didn't invent it though. My googling has totally failed to find the original author.
miniblog.
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I've started using Logseq for note taking: it's roughly in the same space as Roam/Obsidian but OSS and using markdown on your local disk.
So far it works really well. I like using [[Link]] syntax for cross-referencing themes that I mention in several places.
When Nvidia discusses choosing Ada for security critical software, they mention the cost of fuzzing (slide 17). It's an interesting argument: if the language gives you more assurances, you don't need so much compute to fuzz test!
https://www.slideshare.net/AdaCore/securing-the-future-of-safety-and-security-of-embedded-software
@esvrld@octodon.social Zing! 😆
Now you mention it, I'd be really interested to see data on how many times maintenance has changed hands. Adding a maintainer is great, repeatedly changing can indicate abandonware.
