TheSetup Changelog: Difference between revisions
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* '''(December 2014)''' I've completed a nearly complete migration away from LibreOffice which I now only use for reading Office documents. All of my slides that I've developed for teaching are in LaTeX beamer and I've actually gotten pretty good at using [[wikipedia:PGF/TikZ|TikZ]] for doing graphics and layout. The learning curve was step but things are great up at the top of it. | * '''(December 2014)''' I've completed a nearly complete migration away from LibreOffice which I now only use for reading Office documents. All of my slides that I've developed for teaching are in LaTeX beamer and I've actually gotten pretty good at using [[wikipedia:PGF/TikZ|TikZ]] for doing graphics and layout. The learning curve was step but things are great up at the top of it. | ||
* '''(December 2014)''' I'm trying to focus more on using Python and the [http://www.scipy.org/ Scientific Python] stack wherever possible in my research. Although I'm comfortable with R and many other languages, having one language to work with my students in is deeply useful. | * '''(December 2014)''' I'm trying to focus more on using Python and the [http://www.scipy.org/ Scientific Python] stack wherever possible in my research. Although I'm comfortable with R and many other languages, having one language to work with my students in is deeply useful. | ||
* '''(July 2015)''' I've dumped the Kindle DX in favor of the [https://pro.sony.com/bbsc/ssr/product-DPTS1/?PID=I:digitalpaper:digitalpaperproductpage Sony DPTS1]. It's unbelievably lightweight, incredibly fast, fantastic for highlighting and note-taking with a great multi-touch eInk screen. For someone in my line of work where reading student papers and research papers is the name of the game, it's ''fantastic''. It's a Bizarro Sony product in many ways — in a good way: no DRM, only reads/writes PDF, no proprietary formats, only speaks WebDAV over the wire. Just try to not remember that it's a $800 PDF reader and that it does absolutely nothing else. |
Revision as of 00:25, 10 November 2015
In April 11, 2012, I did an interview with The Setup which is online at http://benjamin.mako.hill.usesthis.com/. Over time, my technology use changes but I don't get to update the website very often. As a result, I've tried to keep a changelog here where I update lists of major pieces of software that I adopt. Between that interview and this changelog, you should be able to get a pretty comprehensive idea of what I'm using.
- (January 2013) I've migrated my personal blog, and all of the other blogs that I maintain, from PyBlosxom to Wordpress. You can read more about my experience and rationale on my blog.
- (April 2013) I've started using mosh instead of ssh for most of my interactive shells. It works wonderfully on high latency connections and in situations where you're frequently moving around. It use remote terminals quite a lot and this has been a huge upgrade.
- (April 2013) I've started a long process of switching my slides from LibreOffice/OpenOffice over to LaTeX Beamer. Now that I'm becoming a teacher, I want to make sure I invest my time in teaching materials that I love and that will work over the long haul. The missing pieces for me in Beamer will mostly filled by pdfpc (a former version of which was called pdf-presenter-console) which is something I was previously using quite a bit in openoffice. Reproducing my slides and doing all the things I used to be able to do in LO/OO is a challenge but so far I'm pretty happy with it.
- (May 2014) I've moved on to another X series laptop. This time it's the second-generation, type “20A7″ Lenovo X1 Carbon. This is the laptop with the strange LCD-powered F-key strip above the keyboard. With the laptop, it also made sense to switch to the ThinkPad OneLink Pro Dock. I've documented the specifics of installing GNU/Linux on the devices on my blog.
- (December 2014) I've completed a nearly complete migration away from LibreOffice which I now only use for reading Office documents. All of my slides that I've developed for teaching are in LaTeX beamer and I've actually gotten pretty good at using TikZ for doing graphics and layout. The learning curve was step but things are great up at the top of it.
- (December 2014) I'm trying to focus more on using Python and the Scientific Python stack wherever possible in my research. Although I'm comfortable with R and many other languages, having one language to work with my students in is deeply useful.
- (July 2015) I've dumped the Kindle DX in favor of the Sony DPTS1. It's unbelievably lightweight, incredibly fast, fantastic for highlighting and note-taking with a great multi-touch eInk screen. For someone in my line of work where reading student papers and research papers is the name of the game, it's fantastic. It's a Bizarro Sony product in many ways — in a good way: no DRM, only reads/writes PDF, no proprietary formats, only speaks WebDAV over the wire. Just try to not remember that it's a $800 PDF reader and that it does absolutely nothing else.