time management
I've decided not to schedule chores anymore.
In my free time, I will do what I most feel like in the moment. I don't satisfice. I have imperfect memory, so I keep a list of the options (trying to group things that are sufficiently similar). And I have primacy bias, so the things I do get moved to the end.
I suspect I have enough motivation that I still will get things done when I need to. So far that appears to be the case.
plurality re: kink, hypno //
@lioness My system used to do this naturally. The accidentally-created drone headmate (or one of the others who was well-suited to it) would take over when energy was low.
This week I finally wrote the beginner's security guide I wanted to see in the world. Here's 8 tasks you can do right now, with plenty of vetted resources and the "Cliffsnotes" style summary on why you should do things, risks and limitations, and even what NOT to do. Enjoy! https://hashman.ca/security-101/
New post:
I accidentally became a FOSS maintainer and all I got was this lousy new perspective on librarianship
https://www.hughrundle.net/i-accidentally-became-a-foss-maintainer-and-all-i-got-was-this-lousy-new-perspective-on-librarianship
@emerald I think all of mine have been guids or something. But I don't follow a lot of podcasts.
@mavica_again This is basically how I consume RSS.
Surprisingly, this does not eliminate the risk that the maintainer will want you to explain or modify your patch. https://gitlab.winehq.org/mono/mono/-/merge_requests/175
No one wants to review your patch? Simply become the project maintainer and then merge it yourself. https://gitlab.winehq.org/mono/mono/-/merge_requests/174
@tbodt When that happens, I will write my own logic to fetch the content.