brew install https://gist.githubusercontent.com/leesheppard/69a283ee4af484e2029809a0f5e09932/raw/88bc116b515a456a2e1bad476b6124d28ce2f6f6/imagemagick.rb
To prevent upgrades you can pin this version.
brew pin imagemagick
FWIW: I (@rondy) am not the creator of the content shared here, which is an excerpt from Edmond Lau's book. I simply copied and pasted it from another location and saved it as a personal note, before it gained popularity on news.ycombinator.com. Unfortunately, I cannot recall the exact origin of the original source, nor was I able to find the author's name, so I am can't provide the appropriate credits.
CloudFlare is an awesome reverse cache proxy and CDN that provides DNS, free HTTPS (TLS) support, best-in-class performance settings (gzip, SDCH, HTTP/2, sane Cache-Control
and E-Tag
headers, etc.), minification, etc.
Picking the right architecture = Picking the right battles + Managing trade-offs
Outdated note: the process is a lot easier now: after you brew install postgresql
you can initialize or stop the daemon with these commands: brew services start postgresql
or brew services stop postgresql
.
new out put may look like
To have launchd start postgresql now and restart at login:
brew services start postgresql
Or, if you don't want/need a background service you can just run:
pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start
#!/bin/sh | |
#Check the Drive Space Used by Cached Files | |
du -sh /var/cache/apt/archives | |
#Clean all the log file | |
#for logs in `find /var/log -type f`; do > $logs; done | |
logs=`find /var/log -type f` | |
for i in $logs |
Rich Hickey • 3 years ago
Sorry, I have to disagree with the entire premise here.
A wide variety of experiences might lead to well-roundedness, but not to greatness, nor even goodness. By constantly switching from one thing to another you are always reaching above your comfort zone, yes, but doing so by resetting your skill and knowledge level to zero.
Mastery comes from a combination of at least several of the following: