• 6 Posts
  • 22 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 2nd, 2023

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  • edent@lemmy.oneOPtoUKCasual@lemmy.worldMap of Memorial Benches
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    1 year ago

    Thanks! We have chatted with OSM. At the time we started there wasn’t an inscription field. I think there now is. We’ve also signed a waiver so they can use our data if they wish.

    The slight issue is that our photos are generally taken with a phone’s GPS and may not be suitably accurate for their needs.

    We also aim to be a lot easier to add to than OSM. So there aren’t many checks.

    OSM is a big, well funded project with lots of users and governance. OpenBenches is just me and my wife. We’re not aiming to be them 😀





  • edent@lemmy.onetoUKCasual@lemmy.worldCasual Sunday
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    1 year ago

    I ate too much pizza yesterday and stayed up until 2am gaming.

    I am going to spend today designing watch faces for my new eInk watch. This will be a challenge as I’m a terrible artist and an even worse C++ programmer.

    Luckily ChatGPT is slightly better than me 😀


  • I think you’ve answered your own question - be less meticulous. Oh, and memorise less.

    A good programmer knows where their knowledge boundaries are. For example, if you’re working in JavaScript, you probably don’t need to know bit-shifting.

    A good programmer doesn’t know every feature; they know where to go to find that information. They know how to read the manual of an unfamiliar feature.

    The most important thing you can do is do practical work. Build a website. Try new things. Look up how to implement something and then do it yourself. Find a project that interests you - like building your own website - that’ll stave off the fatigue.

    You don’t need to memorise how to implement a linked-list - you need experience in building.

    Good luck.