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2024

Weekly Report 2024.22

align your daily life to your ultimate destination.

Entertainment

安達としまむら

sweet story of another two lonely girls.

Learning

特に何も

life

  • morning run in june, not bad, I think
  • everyday morning, align your todo to your destination was a great way to start your day

Collectibles

learn

  • set a big, even seemingly unachievable goal, aim for it, and then you might be growing everyday.
  • https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/PBRWb2Em5SNeWYwwB/humans-are-not-automatically-strategic
    • useful tips on goal-achievement
      • ask ourselves what we're trying to achieve
      • ask ourselves how we could tell if we achieved and how we can track progress
      • find ourselves strongly, intrinsically curious about information that would help us achieve our goal
      • gather that information
        • by asking as how folks commoly achieve our goal or similiar goals
        • by talking which strategies have and haven't worked for us in the past
      • systematically test many different conjectures for how to achieve the goals, including methods that aren't habitual for us, while tracking which ones do and don't work
      • focus most of the energy that "isn't" going to systematic exploration, on the methods that work best
      • make sure that our goal is really our goal, that we coherently want it and are not constrained by fears or by uncertainty as to whether it is worth the effort, and that we have thought through any questions and decisions in advance so they won't continually sap our energies
      • use environmental cues and social contexts to bolster our motivation, so we can keep working effectively in the face of intermittent frustrations, or temptations based in hyperbolic discounting
  • 《the seed》
    • 你看待世界的角度决定了你看到的是礼物还是诅咒
    • 让人疲倦的不是辛苦工作,而是消极心态
    • 做什么工作其实不重要,真正重要的是投入到工作中的精力和意识
    • 人往往认为福气装在包装精美的方盒子里,但是福气往往伪装成拆房子用的大铁球,准备摧毁你认知的世界,这样的话你就能以信心和信任为基础,重建你的人生。有时候,我们必须被打倒,才能迈向新高度。
  • co-stars (AI)
    • co-stars 框架就挺好,c context 给出具体上下文并赋予角色 persona,o goal 讲清楚任务目标 s style 明确写作风格 比如我需要 GPT 将中文翻译成 CGTN 的写作风格 t tune 语气语调 A audience 给出具体受众 response 给出输出格式 s segment 如果任务量比较大 可以分割成几部分或者更小的部分 就翻译而言 可以将翻译分为两到三个步骤 先进行粗译 再进行精译 最后进行审校

share

  • https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2024/05/world/hikikomori-asia-personal-stories-wellness/
    • a good cover of the hikikomori problem in asia region
  • https://m.okjike.com/originalPosts/66509a1cd567c7d524a2fb7f
    • 从重视价值创造本身,到转向价值塑造技巧的转变
    • 我们已经进入了一个,不需要生产价值,只需要掌握价值塑造的技巧,就能获得大量流量的时代。
    • 内容是否是爆款=价值塑造+价值本身。
  • https://m.okjike.com/originalPosts/66287c779185c305d1b41c56
    • 成功不是依靠 1 万小时的积累,而是 1 万次的迭代。
    • 你今天做成什么样,你以后就会做成什么样子。
  • 这个世界上,很多所谓美好的东西,就像一个美丽的泡沫,当你触摸到它的一刹那,它就立刻破碎在你面前。
  • https://archive.org/details/bookofornamental00dela
    • ornamented alphabets

Weekly Report 2024.21

穷人一直在学习, 富人一直在行动. Only action will bring you results. Wonder will always be wonder.

Entertainment

物語の黒幕に転生して

I kinda love the "boy meets girl" story.

life

  • the un-lived weekends continues

Collectibles

sharing

Knowing virtues is like having a map; adopting them is actually taking the journey.

  • https://bgr.com/science/frozen-human-brain-tissue-was-successfully-revived-for-the-first-time/
  • https://m.okjike.com/originalPosts/6646307c4713de4d5e9d2172
    • 穷人一直在学习,富人一直在行动
  • https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/Nu16xFYIInSZN5hjW-avrw
    • 知识的缝隙
  • https://m.okjike.com/originalPosts/664d845c9b2032272b8c4a6f
    • 为什么情绪性的东西大多数时候比干货的数据好
    • 相信每个人都有解决问题的能力 - 咨询要做的就是倾听和理解, 让来访者想明白, 说清楚自己内心的想法和感受, TA 自然就有能力解决自己的问题.
    • 大部分人的问题是情绪上的, 是动力不足, 是问题来临时, 自己所出现的焦虑和恐慌的情绪
    • "内容本质是解决人的焦虑, 好的喜剧会让你看到自己"
  • https://t.me/inside1024/54989
    • 一件事情能长久持续的祕诀
      1. 极其不纯的动机。
      2. 低到不行的目标。
      3. 过度的高自我评价。
      4. 适度松懈的进度管理。
      5. 在努力过程中彻底享受。
    • 一件事情无法长久持续的秘诀
      1. 崇高的动机。
      2. 远大的目标。
      3. 冷静客观的自我评价。
      4. 严格的进度管理。
      5. 对结果的执着。
  • https://t.me/inside1024/54999
    • 如果有人因为你设置了界限而觉得不爽,那只代表着一件事,就是他们是控制狂。而这是他们的问题,完全不是你的问题。
  • https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-024-02929-4
    • Association between pretreatment emotional distress and immune checkpoint inhibitor response in non-small-cell lung cancer
  • https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Images/2023/11/Euclid_s_view_of_the_Perseus_cluster_of_galaxies
    • Euclid’s view of the Perseus cluster of galaxies
  • https://github.com/it-ebooks-0/geektime-books

learn

  • https://gaultier.github.io/blog/you_inherited_a_legacy_cpp_codebase_now_what.html
    • how to deal with inherited legacy codebase
  • https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39564632
    • how can I learn about performance optimization
      1. First and foremost: measure early, measure often. It's been said so often and it still needs repeating. In fact, the more you know about performance the easier it can be to fall into the trap of not measuring enough. Measuring will show exactly where you need to focus your efforts. It will also tell you without question whether your work has actually lead to an improvement, and to what degree.
      2. The easiest way to make things go faster is to do less work. Use a more efficient algorithm, refactor code to eliminate unnecessary operations, move repeated work outside of loops. There are many flavours, but very often the biggest performance boosts are gained by simply solving the same problem through fewer instructions.
      3. Understand the performance characteristics of your system. Is your application CPU bound, GPU compute bound, memory bound? If you don't know this you could make the code ten times as fast without gaining a single ms because the system is still stuck waiting for a memory transfer. On the flip side, if you know your system is busy waiting for memory, perhaps you can move computations to this spot to leverage this free work? This is particularly important in shader optimizations (latency hiding).
      4. Solve a different problem! You can very often optimize your program by redefining your problem. Perhaps you are using the optimal algorithm for the problem as defined. But what does the end user really need? Often there are very similar but much easier problems which are equivalent for all practical purposes. Sometimes because the complexity lies in special cases which can be avoided or because there's a cheap approximation which gives sufficient accuracy. This happens especially often in graphics programming where the end goal is often to give an impression that you've calculated something.
  • get things done
    • capture
    • clarify
    • organize
    • reflect
    • engage

Weekly Report 2024.20

Find something important in your life, please.

Entertainment

薬屋のひとりごと

Maomao kawaii.

life

  • read a lot I think, but did those really make any sense?

Collectibles

learn

  • https://psyche.co/ideas/you-can-want-things-you-dont-like-and-like-things-you-dont-want
    • a key part of what dopamine actually does is cause wanting: it's related to the anticipation of rewards, as opposed to the enjoyment of them.
  • https://pboyd.io/posts/securing-a-linux-vm/
    • know your enemy (bots)
    • update the software
    • create a user account
    • disable root logins
    • change the default umask
    • always use new, random generated passwords (ssh keys) ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096
    • wireguard to restrict ip address
    • firewall
  • techniques to read faster
    • be sure that you're now reading in a comfortable environment
    • as you read, pace yourself by moving a finger cross the page, line by line
    • don't regress as you read
    • try to take in groups of words as you read, rather than looking at each word individually
  • https://blog.stackblitz.com/posts/flow-state/
    • create mindfulness and nudging practices
    • reduce tech debt to waste less time
    • make information accessible so you can keep developing

share

  • https://www.bytesizego.com/blog/keeping-alive-with-go
    • knowledge is power
    • how to use golang and open source middlewares to monitor the production environment (which is also the life condition of the author)
  • https://vadimkravcenko.com/shorts/mental-health-in-software-engineering/
    • not every deadlines are equal
    • recognizing when you're starting to burn out or get anxious is crucial.
    • recognizing what's within your control and what's not.
  • https://jerry.wtf/posts/use-your-potions/
    • utilize your resources
  • https://psyche.co/guides/how-to-cope-with-climate-anxiety-and-take-action
  • https://agileotter.blogspot.com/2014/09/programming-is-mostly-thinking.html
  • https://www.news-medical.net/news/20240515/Research-quantifies-impact-of-childhood-obesity-on-long-term-health-and-life-expectancy.aspx
  • https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/TkEcCpPaTX75kZSADgXDnw
    • 2023 我的所有信息源及其生产力模型丨容器、花园和通用生产流范式
    • websites and platforms
  • https://floor796.com
    • internet meme collection

Weekly Report 2024.19

unplanned life is my biggest enemy.

Entertainment

ヌけない聖剣ちゃん

A story for the most cultured of individuals.

Learning

  • running tips
    • slow down
    • small steps (more efficient and better for your joints)
    • land on mid- or forefoot
  • on-call incident steps
    • triage: find the problem, decide its severity, determine who can fix it
    • coordination: teams (potentially customers) must be notified of the issue
    • mitigation: engineers must get things stable as quickly as possible.
    • resolution: engineers continue to investigate the problem to determine and address underlying issues.
    • follow-up: an investigation is conducted into the root cause

life

  • unrealized weekend

Sharing

The missing readme

A pretty good book, which introduces the methodologies for any developer should know and make use of them in real-life. (Something probably no one would teach you, because nowadays companies only need the key result rather than the personal growth of their workers)

life is a marathon, not a sprint. Keep learning, happy hacking.

惯性的双层含义

  • 当物体处于静止状态时, 只有在外力作用下, 物体才会运动
  • 当物体处于运动状态时, 只有在外力作用下, 物体才会停止
  • do 10x times as much
    • https://www.scotthyoung.com/blog/2024/04/16/procrastination-productive/
    • https://www.scotthyoung.com/blog/2023/09/26/10x-rule-ambitious-goals/
  • https://psyche.co/ideas/is-it-better-to-live-in-clock-time-or-event-time
    • Clock-timers rely on an external cue to tell them when to start and finish work.
    • An event-timer might work on a project until it’s done – ending at no predetermined time.
  • https://t.me/caozsay/852
    • 记住一条做人原则,你只代表你自己。也许你能代表一小撮和你品味,价值观相似的人,也许,别太高估自己,最好你能明白,你只代表你自己。代表你自己做出的判断和选择,只要不违法,是你的自由。
    • 妄图代表所有人,你就是一傻逼。
  • https://t.me/WebNoteslah/405
    • 网络上常见的四大愚昧
      • 一是对从未见过的人恨之入骨
      • 二是对从未做过的事引以为傲
      • 三是对吹捧出来的神纳头就拜
      • 四是对画而未得的饼感恩戴德
  • https://www.sahilbloom.com/newsletter/9-ideas-from-a-weekend-with-legends
    • 9 Ideas from a Weekend With Legends
      1. go where you don't belong
        1. the feeling of uncertainty, fear, and discomfort is usually a sign of growth
      2. self-awareness is a cheat code for life
        1. the ability and willingness to understand and embrace your competencies and deficiencies is a cheat code for life
      3. focus on game access first, game selection next
      4. find your foxhole friends
      5. you'd rather have one sharp knife than 1000 dull ones
      6. being interested is a rare and powerful trait in the morden world
        1. being interested is how you become interesting
      7. if you want to unlock new insights, you need to find your garden
        1. an escape that allows you to create space in your life to think
      8. complexity may sound sexy, but simplicity usually wins in the long run
      9. surround yourself with people you'd want to spend your last day of life with
        1. who you choose to spend your time with is the most important decision you will ever make

Spend each day trying to be a little wiser than you were when you woke up. Day by day, and at the end of the day, if you live long enough, like most people, you will get out of life what you deserve.

References

  • https://www.afterbabel.com/p/phone-based-childhood-cause-epidemic
    • social media and teenager
  • https://ohmygit.org/
    • an open source game about git
  • https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01200-7
    • Why is exercise good for you? Scientists are finding answers in our cells