Been using the Kensington Expert Wireless a couple of years now.
System/web/Linux developer
Been using the Kensington Expert Wireless a couple of years now.
My go to smartphone keyboard is MessagEase. A few larger buttons instead of many small. You can get quite fast on it, and larger buttons means fewer mistakes.
What, no websocket-based realtime statistics for number of total, daily and hourly mistypings?
I’m horrfied every day at work that copy/paste still is an issue. All my coworkers and customers are still struggling with copying some data, switching to another program, pasting it, switching back, copying some other data, and so on, especially when needing two or three data frequently.
In Windows, a (bad) solution is using win+tab, which literally no one knows about, much less uses.
In Linux (and should be in Windows too), it is trivial to implement buffers (say 0-9) to store and retrieve clipboard data for subseconds access.
Javascript/Preact/Lesscss on frontend with a backend written i Go, using Postgres for data needs. Sometimes with websockets in between if needed.
Author turned TCP/IP off on the server ☺
I have taken up the habit of being at work one-two hours before anyone else.
I get undisturbed, effective work done, and I leave earlier. More work done, more own time with family each day.
I’m still reachable through phone, add can fix most catastrophic problems from home, but that is so seldom occuring that it is OK, and collegues don’t complain about me not being in office after 15:00.
Depending on what one is doing, placing pv
in between (usually with -s to specify size of data if known in advance) gives a progress bar, with speed and size of data passing through.
Say you have an SQL dump of 1048576 bytes:
cat dump.sql | pv -s 1048576 | mysql somedb
and now you know how far it is instead of just waiting :)
The Kame ipsec project (https://www.kame.net) has a turtle image which is animated if visited with an IPv6 address.