When it happens - you will still find me on
https://t.co/06b7TxWP7H
https://t.co/SMgRObSezZ
https://t.co/mhQTM3oTBW
https://t.co/bEK3boN0oe
https://t.co/8EOKTu8lAr
ZetteNote: an offline-first, Zettelkasten-inspired PWA for IT & programming students.
Linked notes, tags, search, Markdown, JSON import/export.
https://t.co/KAyy6KPfqy
Final-year projects often vanish after graduation.
Testing an experiment: The Graduate Directory (v0.001): a guide + template + form to help students create a solid README and make their work discoverable.
Early version here: https://t.co/UUb2s82jMh
Open to feedback
@CityPowerJhb There is a power outage in Lenasia Ext 5 and surrounding extensions - Ref CPWEB4803583 - Can technicians please be assigned and dispatched to restore the power
@CityPowerJhb Lenasia Ext 5 and surrounding extensions have just lost power a second day in a row - can technicians please be dispatched to investigate and restore power as soon as possible - ref CPWEB4686132 @CllrMoosa
@CityPowerJhb Lenasia Ext 5 and surrounding extensions in the area just lost power - can technicians please be dispatched to investigate and restore power as soon as possible - ref CPWEB4682915 //
Tsundoku
Tsundoku is a beautiful Japanese word for acquiring and piling up books without reading them.
It is constructed from two words that loosely mean "piling up" and "reading."
It's easy to fall prey to tsundoku. Immediately upon entering a bookstore, I'm filled with the promise of knowledge and entertainment that exudes from the books. Each book calls out to share its wisdom and the draw of quiet hours spent reading it.