text
stringlengths
7
369
[756.92 --> 763.76] I thought about it quite a lot, actually, when I was deep into my sort of Emacs kick, which lasted about three or four months.
[764.14 --> 774.02] And I was doing all the org Rome stuff, which came out of Rome Research, line of thinking, the, what's it called, second brain, linking your thinking type stuff.
[774.02 --> 781.64] I was sort of going down this whole productivity rabbit hole and realized I was spending way longer trying to be productive than actually being productive.
[781.64 --> 788.40] So I looked at a few things built into Emacs, org mode primarily being the one I looked at.
[789.42 --> 800.30] But mobile experience, the mobile experience matters a lot because that's where, you know, 90% of my random thoughts occur to me is, oh, I need to remember to change the filters on the AC unit.
[800.30 --> 805.40] Or, I don't know, remember to pick up this from the shop on the way home or something like that.
[806.12 --> 812.30] And I ended up falling into the camp of just using Todoist, which is not a self-hosted app, unfortunately.
[812.68 --> 814.42] But for me, it's worked very, very well.
[815.10 --> 818.72] It's got some integrations with Gmail, which I use all the time at work.
[818.80 --> 825.14] So there's a bunch of stuff I have to do in my day job where I need to remember certain case numbers and add comments and all that kind of stuff.
[825.14 --> 833.40] And I can just click a button in Gmail and it adds it straight into Todoist and I can, you know, keyboard shortcuts and natural text input and all that kind of stuff.
[834.00 --> 837.94] That's not really what you wanted to hear, but I really like Todoist.
[838.56 --> 842.80] I understand Todoist and its many integrations and its API are really, really handy.
[843.26 --> 845.20] And I think that's the hosted service to beat.
[845.94 --> 854.66] Fikinja or however you say it, what I was really impressed by is they maintain a really clean user interface where you could just bang out tasks super quick.
[855.14 --> 860.18] But they also let you really dig in and set all kinds of different bits of detail.
[860.44 --> 861.40] You can add relation.
[861.66 --> 862.58] You can add attachments.
[863.12 --> 864.50] You can do progress tasks.
[864.56 --> 866.20] You can just do percentage updates.
[866.56 --> 869.44] You can have repeating intervals, priorities, labels.
[869.72 --> 874.90] You can subscribe to certain tasks, even if you're not the user, if you just want to get updates on it.
[874.90 --> 879.08] I mean, it's got like all the power features I love.
[879.66 --> 882.96] I think it's going to come down to what it's like to maintain and run it.
[882.96 --> 889.58] So I'm tempted to give it a go, but I'll wait a week or two and get like input from the audience to hear what they're using for self-hosted to do apps.
[890.48 --> 892.24] Or maybe I should just not give it a go.
[892.34 --> 894.06] Maybe you've got experience out there that says otherwise.
[894.50 --> 897.16] And I should just give in like Alex and use Todoist.
[899.20 --> 901.44] Linode.com slash SSH.
[901.44 --> 905.06] Go there to get $100 in 60-day credit on a new account.
[905.26 --> 906.78] And you go there to support the show.
[907.66 --> 911.74] Linode is the best way to run an application on Linux in the cloud.
[911.74 --> 915.22] It's how we run everything we've built for the last two and a half years or so.
[915.58 --> 917.64] It's really, really fast.
[917.80 --> 918.98] They have great performance.
[919.08 --> 920.72] They have 11 data centers around the world.
[920.84 --> 922.20] NVMe, PCIe storage.
[922.42 --> 925.20] They've got AMD EPYC processors and their CPU rigs.
[925.44 --> 927.94] 40 gigabit connections coming into the hypervisors.
[928.16 --> 929.74] And they are their own ISP.
[930.24 --> 935.16] So that's like all the things you need to just have fantastic performance.
[935.58 --> 938.08] And on top of that, they have the best support.
[938.08 --> 941.82] That's where they really try to differentiate from the hyperscalers they're going to lock
[941.82 --> 943.00] into their crazy platforms.
[943.10 --> 948.18] They really try to differentiate with the customer service and the community support.
[948.82 --> 949.72] I'll say that.
[949.78 --> 951.78] They've been a big supporter of Jupyter Broadcasting.
[952.06 --> 956.74] And they're making it possible for us to go down and get a tour of JPL and do a bunch of
[956.74 --> 957.66] West Coast meetups.
[957.66 --> 963.14] They invest in the community because they know it returns a net benefit to them.
[963.62 --> 965.58] Because Linux is what they run on everything.
[966.38 --> 967.24] Go build something.
[967.36 --> 968.12] Go learn something.
[968.60 --> 969.42] Try Linode out.
[969.84 --> 973.06] Go get that $100 and try out their S3 compatible object storage.
[973.62 --> 977.70] Maybe you want to play around with their VLAN configurator, their powerful DNS manager.
[978.12 --> 980.64] Or perhaps you just want to try something.
[981.46 --> 983.04] Maybe you want to performance test your network.
[983.04 --> 987.14] Maybe you want to deploy their new Kali Linux support and do a little penetration testing
[987.14 --> 988.64] to make sure everything's buttoned up.
[989.00 --> 989.84] You can do it.
[989.96 --> 992.44] 30 to 50% cheaper than you can at the hyperscalers.
[992.58 --> 993.80] And you can support the show.
[994.14 --> 997.00] So go try out the best in virtualized cloud computing.
[997.14 --> 999.24] If it runs on Linux, it runs on Linode.
[999.76 --> 1001.08] Sign up today and support the show.
[1001.70 --> 1004.36] Linode.com slash SSH.
[1004.60 --> 1009.10] That's Linode.com slash SSH to get that $100 and support the show.
[1009.70 --> 1012.00] Linode.com slash SSH.
[1014.00 --> 1016.08] We've got a live Brent update for you.
[1016.18 --> 1020.92] His departure flight from Toronto is delayed by 10 minutes.
[1021.14 --> 1027.14] So I don't know if he's off his original plane yet or through customs or anything.
[1027.34 --> 1028.98] But it's seat of the pants stuff, I think.
[1029.52 --> 1034.08] It's going to be a full on running down the airport kind of movie style moment for Brent,
[1034.16 --> 1034.46] I think.
[1034.54 --> 1034.82] Yeah.
[1035.20 --> 1035.44] Yeah.
[1035.50 --> 1035.94] Poor guy.
[1036.44 --> 1038.78] Hopefully things go smoother for you and the family.
[1039.20 --> 1039.98] Hopefully so.
[1040.08 --> 1040.30] Yes.
[1040.30 --> 1042.14] It's just a direct flight for us tomorrow.
[1042.34 --> 1043.48] Raleigh to London Heathrow.
[1043.48 --> 1046.98] Hopefully the baggage handlers are on point tomorrow.
[1047.14 --> 1050.16] I did buy a couple of extra air tags to throw into my suitcases.
[1050.58 --> 1050.94] Atta boy.
[1051.04 --> 1051.72] That's so fun.
[1051.82 --> 1055.96] The last time I traveled, I did that and we checked baggage and then you just watch.
[1056.46 --> 1059.86] And then as soon as it starts to get close and it detects it again, you know, your bag's
[1059.86 --> 1060.44] almost there.
[1060.54 --> 1062.24] And then, you know, you can tell when it comes down the chute.
[1062.34 --> 1065.00] It was luxury checking.
[1065.64 --> 1068.18] I am actually, I hadn't thought about the baggage reclaim part.
[1068.18 --> 1070.40] I'm actually genuinely excited for that now.
[1070.90 --> 1071.06] Yeah.
[1071.16 --> 1071.60] It's great.
[1072.72 --> 1077.52] You know, I was going through the inbox and a lot of people have caught that you're going
[1077.52 --> 1080.00] to London, obviously, because we have the meetup coming up and all of that.
[1080.12 --> 1085.08] And we clearly got people to want updates on your remote backup setup you have across
[1085.08 --> 1085.50] the pond.