Digital exclusion is not a second-order problem. For millions of people it is a health problem, a care problem, and a rights problem. #Digitalinclusion#Digital https://t.co/bH7E2qpo1c
Our ‘Connecting Glasgow’ programme will prioritise the delivery of 54km of walking, wheeling & cycling routes by 2032 – building on existing infrastructure & closing network gaps to create joined‑up links to key destinations & neighbourhoods.
More - https://t.co/Va03v2o6gA
A DEVELOPER MADE A REAL COMMIT WITHOUT EVER TYPING GIT ADD OR GIT COMMIT -- JUST TO PROVE THE COMMANDS YOU LIVE BY ARE A THIN SHELL OVER A DATABASE YOU'VE NEVER ONCE OPENED
55 minutes from Tim Berglund, a longtime Git teacher and GitHub evangelist, taking the tool apart down to the raw objects almost nobody who uses it every day has ever touched.
-> The moment it clicks, Git stops being a pile of memorized commands and becomes what it actually is underneath: a tiny content-addressed database of blobs, trees and commits. git add and git commit are just polite wrappers around writing objects into it by hand.
Every commit you've ever made was Git hashing a snapshot and filing it by fingerprint. Branches are just labels pointing at one of those objects. The work you thought you destroyed with a bad reset is still sitting in the reflog. Once you can see that graph, the commands that used to terrify you stop being scary at all.
Memorizing commands was never the skill -> reading the object graph in your head is. And with an AI agent now committing and rebasing on your machine faster than you can follow, the one person who can untangle the mess it leaves is the one who knows what's really stored down there.
There's a person on every team everyone runs to when Git breaks. This is the talk that quietly turns you into them.
You'll reach for it the next time a rebase goes sideways.
Bookmark & Watch it today ↓
This man lives next door to this yard. His neighbor’s two Doberman’s got out.
He takes the time to round them up and bring them back to their yard. They are giving him a lot of grief. They seem friendly enough but they don’t want to go back inside, they want to play.
You can tell this isn’t his first rodeo with them. To have a neighbor like this is being rich in life. What a great guy.
Not only did he save them from possibly creating some havoc but he saved them from getting hurt. Having a neighbor like this, you just can’t put a price on that. 💯
Do you have neighbors that would go above and beyond like this and do this for you and your dogs?