Happy Friday!
Looking back on your week — what was something you're proud of?
All wins count — big or small 🎉
Examples of 'wins' include:
Star...
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
I landed a new job after 4 months of job hunting
Congrats well done!
thank you
Congratulations!!
Thank you
Starting as a Senior FrontEnd Consultant in a company I dreamed of working with 😱
Now it's a reality and I'm part of the Passionate People family 🤯 Looking forward to the next weeks and the projects I'll be helping 😍🚀
I made it to the top 7 on DEV for the first time with my article about switching to Linux 🥳
Switching to Arch Linux
Mauro Garcia ・ Feb 23 ・ 6 min read
✨ Signed up to be a mentor! Super proud, never thought I’d have the confidence to do so. ✨ I’ve also signed up to numerous women in tech communities to get involved with. ✨
Just finished this morning a project at work that took me roughly a year to complete!
Also started a new project to build your own portable Wifi / ethernet access point with DNS blocker and e-ink screen to control it. Pretty proud, will share the project very soon over here
I wrote my first serverless function.
I created a small side project:
shhdharmen / github-link
⚓ Get links to code in your GitHub files based on text, and forget the line numbers!
GitHub Link
Get links for your GitHub files based on text, and forget the line numbers!
Why GitHub Link?
In Short
We usually create link-to-code to point our readers, users or developers to the exact code. But such links are created based on line-number and if you're updating the file regularly, those links will not point to correct line or you will need to keep updating your links. GitHub Link helps you to get the right link-to-code, based on text you give, so that it always points to contextually right definition. Jump to usage
In Long
We generally create permanent link to code snippet. As they are for specific commit, they work great when referred in issues/PRs.
But what if you want to give such links in your README or such files? Like you have already defined a coded file with proper comments and you want to give link to…
great
Opened up some new job opportunities because of articles I wrote.
It has been one month since I've released my book Building Your Mouseless Development Environment which explains how to install Arch Linux, i3, Zsh, Neovim, and tmux.
... and I've reached 300 buyers today! Even crazier: nobody asked for a refund, and all feedback were super positive. This is a huge, massive, crazy win for me 🥰
This was my first official week as a manager in my new position and though it was extremely busy I completed most of my goals and even got in some professional development! I managed to write a blog post about Statamic in my free time one evening as well!
At work (relatively new job, 3 months in) I set up a live environment for a customer. My first time doing that. But what I am most proud of is 'cleaning up' the git repo all by myself before I deployed the master branch to live. I merged everything into develop and merged that into master. Up untill last week I really felt like I would never really understand Git and all this abstract stuff (where is it going when I push? And other questions), but now.. it seems like I do 🤗🥳
Figured out how to do non-public Azure Container Registries through only using Private Endpoints.
Also figured out Flux v2 and updated one of our Terraform modules to bootstrap an AKS with it. V excited.
This week I've started frontend mentor challenges,
The challenge is really way good for beginner.
If you guys have any basic challenges in other languages I will be happy to participate to gain some knowledge from it
My First experience with docker 😍
My win just happened. I was able to get the movement of a mouse collider box to move at the same speed and distance if you change the size of the screen.
I loved attending the Gatsby Conference this week. Never used it before, but after getting a crash course in what it can do, I’m ready to give it a shot. :)
We are working on a SaaS product at my day-job and we got our first organic customer this week 🎉
I did my first post on DEV. 😊
Success to force all IAM user to enable MFA with the instruction of overcoming the issue of temporary credential
dev.to/vumdao/force-enable-aws-mfa...
Down cost of S3 storage by using lifecyle policy here
dev.to/vumdao/how-is-your-s3-bucke...
I created new content about Django, and I returned to school in presencial modality.
Presenting a project for The Relicans. Originally I was thinking on an API only but I created also amdecent webpage and dashboard eventually.
Won 2nd Runner Up 🏆😻 (Bronze Award), in SLIIT CODEFEST HACKATHON out of more than 100 competing university teams from all around the island
My post on "Do you use Linux" made more than 9k views and more than 100 comments which is insane:
dev.to/alexgeorgiev17/do-you-use-l...
I finally did a successful setup of a BGP router to announce my IPv6 prefix.
This week it comes down to I made it through the week and shipped to production. That always makes for a better weekend. I even got caught up on my email.
Published a new mapping site, latlonlocate.com (more info)
Finally begun my DevOps journey by learning it's principles and my first tool: Docker
I finally understand Go and cloud native
I was featured on dev.to's podcast 😄
I also spent some time with a collaborator making a few jazz standards rendition in Gwion using the discord bot, and that also feels like a huge win.
finally can create a draggable browser in mozilla hubs
My project is going like a fire 🔥 100 stars in 7 days.
github.com/saviomartin/gradientking
Started providing short tips on Twitter for Front End, Blogging and personal branding.
This got me to meet amazing people on Tech Twitter community
Solved an algorithm question on leetcode without looking at Sean's answer, lol