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The ins and outs of the Deno runtime. Since I want to build my first text/video course about it.

On the one side it could be a cool side project where I can help people getting their hands dirty with Deno and follow my passion on teaching interesting topics to folks. On the other side I want to push a project of myself over the finish line and maybe make a dollar or two with it.


Where do you want to publish the course to?


That is actually to be discussed. I started thinking about putting it up on Udemy but in the meantime I was thinking that I might just put it in a .zip and just distribute it via gumroad. Or even use their video hosting platform.

If you have recommendations let me know!


This. "Atomic Habits" was a game changer in forming new habits for me. Especially the point of habit stacking is something that sticked with me.

I recommend the book to everyone who is interested in forming new habits or getting rid of old "bad" habits


There is outline for that: https://outline.com/skRR3T


Did you check if your public IP changes after this minute? I don't know if this still happens but back in the past my router did this every 24h to get a new IP.


A lot of service providers do this because they do not want you to host static services from your "dynamic" home IP, as they are selling "business" lines with dedicated static IPs. Or at least they used to do this for that reason. By now it's just some thing a lot of ISP do. I have seen other possible explanations like ISP claiming this is a "security" feature because attackers cannot have permanent access without always learning the new IP, which is supposedly somehow hard. This is pretty bull tho. If attackers have access to your system they could just run software signalling them back any IP changes. And even nmapping the entire IP space of an ISP to find a service you were hitting again is very feasible.

Anyway, if the ISP does this, then you have to reconnect once every day (or sometimes every two days), and if you don't do so manually they will just cut your connection on their side and make you reconnect.

My (German) ISP does that too, the one I had before did it, the one before did it as well.


If you can replace the ISP provided router with your own you should be able to renew the lease.


I can confirm this. The time is around 7:00PM and the IP address changes, and I have to log in again to some websites because my IP has changed. Downtime is approximately 2 minutes.


This was my thought as well. It sounds like a 24 hour DHCP lease expiring.


Same here in Germany. Gmail says that my account can not be found. Plus Google's support page is also down


https://www.headspace.com - started half a year ago and meditated everyday since then.


This is something I also learnt this year after reading The Headspace Guide to Meditation & Mindfulness by Andy Puddicombe the founder of Headspace.

After only 10 minutes of meditation you feel a lot better than before. I can not recommend it enough to try it.

I use the Headspace App for the guided meditations and it's free to learn the basics in 10 sessions/days.


Since you mentioned that this would be an internal web page for your friend's company Netlify does not seem to be the best answer for that. When there is already a working nginx just push it via FTP. If you know how this is done, do it like that.

Sure there are those "cool" new ways but when you know how this could be done in a way you are familiar with go for it.

But if you have the time and the page does not have to be running asap go that way with building it around Vue.js and webpack etc.


Lost Connections by Johann Hari

About the sources of depression and anxiety of the current society. Interesting book backed with a lot of studies.


Since you use MD files for "organising" you may have a look at Notable [1] which is Open Source and uses MD files under the hood. And you can tag your posts to organise your projects

Personally I use a combination of Bear App [2] for Mac to organize my Notes. Bear has a built in tag function which is really easy to use. Also I'm a huge fan of it's minimalistic design. For ToDos I use Things 3 [3] which let's you categorize your ToDos in different projects.

But both are Mac only currently which is a pain point at work where I use Windows.

[1] https://github.com/notable/notable

[2] https://bear.app/

[3] https://culturedcode.com/things/


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