There are three types of interview questions: behavioral, hypothetical, and trivia. Behavioral questions are the gold standard; they’re the most effective at predicting job performance. Hypothetical questions can be useful in certain circumstances, if used correctly. Avoid trivia.| jacobian.org
One Week With Desktop Linux After a 20 Year Absence| Naildrivin' 5 - Website of David Bryant Copeland
Since my earliest university days, I’ve spent a lot of time trying to get better at computers, immersing myself in the world of Linux, and generally improving my software development skills. One of the aspects that was the most helpful to help me grow was attempting to replicate my normal dev workflow, but with less: Learn to operate on Linux not Windows, then learn to do dev via on the terminal instead of GUIs, and eventually learn to do the same but offline, without any network calls.| jiby.tech
Hard to discover tips and apps for making macOS pleasant| thume.ca
The one in which we design a rich Integrated Development Environment (IDE) experience, using Clojure as our muse. Featuring Language Server Protocol (lsp-mode + clojure-lsp), clojure-mode, cider, and more! Buckle up and get a coffee.| www.evalapply.org
More helpful help for Terminal commands| The Robservatory
A love letter to tools that changed everything for me.| Hynek Schlawack
Advanced Hackery With The Hammerspoon Window Manager| thume.ca