TL;DR: If you want to see me perform a spoken word poem about JavaScript in front of 1000 people (and on video), please ⭐ star this gist. If you're on mobile, you'll need to request desktop site.
| gifify() { | |
| if [[ -n "$1" ]]; then | |
| if [[ $2 == '--good' ]]; then | |
| ffmpeg -i $1 -r 10 -vcodec png out-static-%05d.png | |
| time convert -verbose +dither -layers Optimize -resize 600x600\> out-static*.png GIF:- | gifsicle --colors 128 --delay=5 --loop --optimize=3 --multifile - > $1.gif | |
| rm out-static*.png | |
| else | |
| ffmpeg -i $1 -s 600x400 -pix_fmt rgb24 -r 10 -f gif - | gifsicle --optimize=3 --delay=3 > $1.gif | |
| fi | |
| else |
This is a CFP for ReactiveConf 2017's open call for Lightning talks. If you'd like to see this talk become a reality, please ⭐ star this gist. #ReactiveConf
To me, legacy code is simply code without tests. I’ve gotten some grief for this definition. What do tests have to do with whether code is bad? To me, the answer is straightforward, and it is a point that I elaborate throughout the book: Code without tests is bad code. It doesn’t matter how well written it is; it doesn’t matter how pretty or object-oriented or well-encapsulated it is. With tests, we can change the behavior of our code quickly and verifiably. Without them, we really don’t know if our code is getting better or worse.
Four Reasons to Change Software: For simplicity’s sake, let’s look at four primary reasons to change software.
A comprehensive tour of a professional solo-developer Claude Code setup spanning fifteen repositories and twelve worktrees. Covers workflow discipline, session persistence, automated quality gates, business operations, and EOS management.
Last updated: 2026-06-18
What this is: a tour of a working setup and the reasoning behind it — useful for borrowing patterns. What this is NOT: an install guide, a list of best practices, or a snapshot that stays accurate without updates. Plugin versions, pg_cron schedules, and file counts are point-in-time.