thanks. i installed and set it up. There are some catches but, i think i can live with these :)
Posts by alptekin I.
recently checking about #wsl #linux. it is interesting. And probably i will have a good use case to use it. And in a video i realized that @thealexlichter.com uses it, i suppose.. (selective perception :) ). Any feedback on this?
just migrating my react+maplibre project to #viteplus. The project is in early stages, so i am expecting nothing fancy right now, or no breaking but I am excited to use this tool for my project.
Thanks for sharing. I also like a lot your discussions on books with Seyfettin B. On your podcast.
Great work 👏
I wonder, how the ai agents like claude code or so are integrated into the daily work of open-source developers in general? how frequent do you use, how do they use it? make it code and then review, or make partial development, like co-development? Can anyone comment?
Thanks :)
Life goal: to be able to be speaker (last minute or not) to such a nice community
As others, I loved reading this. I hope i will write My own story too, soon.
i am currently working on an issue to make my first commit ever (to #npmx and to any oss), this post (and others, as I might have read a bunch of posts on making PR to npmx) was very encouraging. I love people writing these kinds of posts.
Thanks. I will do that, I will return about my experience.
Should I migrate my react/vite project to #vite+. currently it is in early stage, no testing Yet. Should I expect any downside after migrating?
Congrats. Still moving to kitchen and occasionally If I am luck using 20+ inch monitor.
it seems great news are announced in Amsterdam about #vite, my fav tool. I need to watch those videos asap.
thanks to @farisaziz12.bsky.social post (on linkedin i suppose) i am notified of this @npmx.dev, which absolutely excited me (looking ways to contribute). There is some magic in open source, in collaborating and forming a community. Hope to be here and there.
I am so glad that you are back. i re-read your previous ”leave” post too. i realized that it is so easy to underestimate the hard work oss maintainers like you put in and the burden you might feel. So thank you again and welcome back.
I just started using Bluesky pwa. I silenced notifications on purpose but when there is a like or so it doesn’t put the red-1 text (whatever it is called) on the icon Something related to my settings or this is how it is?
Started using bluesky PWA. i think PWAs are quite interesting and feel like they are underrated. Even myself. I am going to build my next app as a pwa.
Great. 👍
will it be published in @codetv.dev, I am sure it is quite interesting
Ok thanks. 🙏
reading the blogs on npmx for sometime and started examining the code. Well, i will be honest, this is exciting. I am in the group "who wants to contribute in an OSS but failed miserably in this". need to better understand and catch the talks but unfortunately discord is out of my reach. Too bad.
Congrats to the team.
Had a peep and immediately saw that this needs a more detailed reading. Again. Very interesting. Superb. Thanks.
so as we wrap up 2025. i wish for all, including myself, peace (in -self and worldwide), happiness, health, -enough / proper- success. As years go by and i get more -senior-, i see that these are not any cliche but what matters truly. Good bye 2025, hello 2026
Recently, i made additional config to my vscode settings, now feel more terminal-like, with no clutter and easiness of adding any plugins... I like it more. Also, recently wrote many markdown notes, truly loved the features MD presents, images, links, marking, bullets, checkboxes, etc.
Ok, I get your point, thanks for your reply. Still I believe it is an important skill, the methods you use might differ though. LLMs could really be useful, but it is a method.
LLM's took which job away? didnt get it. It is sure that it is not easy (and tbh seems too cumbersome to me currently) but, did not get your point really. Why do you think so? Using apple/google maps is on different context. You dont need now to use paper maps, so you dont (need to) learn.
Learning about a well established professional-grade codebase and start understanding it (even before making contributions) is hard. I must certainly improve this skill.
Sounds nice. It is refreshing to pull oneself periodically out of rush and overthinking, and supported even by the org and managers. Happy quiet moments