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Actually, they're doing a lot to document it. I'm part of that effort. It's just *new* and complicated. The only issue is *I* need to know some things I currently don't - but those aren't the parts I am documenting.
I'm not going to slam this company, especially since they seem to be putting in more effort to document their offerings than a lot of folks do.
It's just growing pains, getting it out there in the first place. They have reference docs but they're simply not enough - they don't help much without examples and how tos. Which is why people like me are writing them.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Things still seem odd. If they are serious about documenting things, wouldn't they release the project after documentation was complete enough for others to use? According to their website, you must pay for their services/products, so they aren't open source. Professionals might get professional writers to help create documentation, but wouldn't they do so before releasing?
Anyway, best wishes for your work. Hope you get answers from them, and payment as well!
And tell them to get rid of such hogwash as "Operationalize Agility..." on their website.
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Probably because it's open source. I'm not worried about not getting paid. My client is above board and I'm sure their clients are too. If they're not, my client will look out for me.
About Chef Habitat[^]
I set it up without paying them any money. Downloaded it installed a server and everything. I can't quite get it to work but it's not because i owe them money.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Their website makes it look like closed-source PHB-defined capitalistic product.
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It's not. You can install it and use it without paying them money. I'm not sure what their license looks like, or if there's a difference between personal and professional use. I'm just going purely on what their website said, plus my own experience installing it.
Real programmers use butterflies
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As I said before, good luck with it! Hopefully they will answer your questions quickly!
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I'm sure it will get resolved. I just wanted to do my own due diligence and exhaust every resource I could find, which includes putting my feelers out on CP.
So now I can sleep easier knowing I've done my part, and I don't have any more threads to pull.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Is Chef Habitat a fancy name for "kitchen?"
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I thought something similar when I saw the name. I like it. It's fun.
Real programmers use butterflies
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My current Lenovo Preferred II USB keyboard is dying (currently my "Del" key sounds funny when I press it) and I've start looking for a replacement.
And I have discovered an entire world of craziness...
Are mechanical keyboards worth it?
If they are, is really that TOPRE thing the best thing in the world?
Are you using a full keyboard for your work or you are using a TKL + separate numpad or something different?
This seems to be the best thing you can buy[^], but it uses ANSI layout, which is a no go for me (ISO here), but... is that thing worth it?
And of course, having almost 15M of programmers and technology enthusiasts at hand... I thought I would ask this here...
Thank you all!
modified 30-Jan-21 8:47am.
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I personally like to have the Num-Pad on the side. And hate "non" standard keys like the "Fn" Key many laptops bring, and even more when they get placed where usually other thing is (like moving the CTRL to be the second on the left)
Beyond that... I usually don't care that much (yet)
At home I have an old Logitech "qwertz" (germany keyboard layout) with big Enter Key. (Symbols are a bit different than in the spanish layout but still 80-85% same)
At work I have a Fujitsu "qwertz" with the same distribution of keys, only that the keys have less volumen (they are a bit more flat as it would be a lappie)
The fujitsu doesn't require too much pression to hit, what makes it more confortable, but more easy to "double" letters when typing.
So far... everytime I have changed the keyboard I have needed one or two weeks adaptation time and then everything was fine. And up to now, I haven't tested any where I would say... "wow" I want one of those very badly.
I kind of miss a bit my old mechanical keyboard during college in spain. But not really because of "mechanical" tech side of it but for the nostalgical side of it... the many hours I used it, the what I was using it for and the different sound it did.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Personally, I like simple. I've never had a problem with the keyboards with the rubber membranes instead of mechanical keys. If you're used to them, I'd say why bother switching to something more expensive? I know gamers like them, but gamers are an odd bunch anyway. Personally i think they should just have keyboards with only W/A/S/D and a trackball on them, but nobody listens to me.
KISS carries the day for me, in almost all things. More to the point - things should be as simple as they can be, and no simpler.
A keyboard should be simple, IMO.
The fanciest keyboard I have is LED lit because I sleep 4 hours a night so I often work in the dark and while I can touch type, it's nice to have some ambient light on my desk. I only have it though because it came with my PC.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Gamer here. We pretty much use the entire left hand side of the keyboard and the spacebar. It's actually too much sometimes for my old reflexes to remember everything sometimes.
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I was just teasing.
I'm a fallout addict myself. otherwise i don't play much, but when i do i use a gamepad. keyboards are for typing, not greasing super mutants, IMO.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Fair enough, lol. I rarely do any work on my home keyboard which is a Corsair mechanical without the 10 keypad. I would die without that on my work keyboard.
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I use a mechanical ten keyless keyboard (Cooler Master Quickfire) on all my home computers. Also, I don't think I've ever come across an instance when I used the 10 key pad at work (retired now). I vaguely remember having a game decades ago that used the keypad but that's about it.
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I learned 10 key when I was younger so it's old habit for me whenever I have to enter numbers.
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Yeah, old habits are hard to break. In Windows I still use WordStar control sequences when editing text. I remapped my keyboard to put the control key back to it's original position (where the capslock key is) and wrote an AutoHotkey script to use Wordstar control sequences in all the editors/IDEs/word processors that I use. Heh, nobody I know can use my editors unless they disable the script!
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Joan M wrote: Are mechanical keyboards worth it?
Yup. Corsair here. Is also a RGB-type keyboard, with led light dancing. And best of all, it is spill-proof
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Keyboards? How quaint.
Why don't you just hold up the mouse and talk into it?
Start simply with something like "Computer..."
(A Scottish accent will probably help with this!)
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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I have a code full keyboard, I've been using it for a long while now,
It is a good keyboard, heavy, stable, nice key lighting, nice keys feeling.
not cheap; but it's something that I use every day.
It has one issue, the usb plug is flimsy.
I'm thinking of buying one for home (to game), probably one without a numerical keypad (not useful for home use)
I'd rather be phishing!
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Full keyboard, as in, numeric keypad on the side. Can't stand the inverted T cursor keys, never use them.
I love my Logitech illuminated keyboard. Actually, I should say the 3 or so I have lying around the house.
Mechanical? Ew. I want a quiet keyboard. I want a keys with minimal travel and force.
Though some sort of sci-fi sound would cool, like they have on sci-fi shows, but I've never found a decent sound effect that I can tie into a key press.
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I can only tolerate ones with palm rests ... which have been MS keyboards.
A wifi one is handy for using with Hololense and the like.
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
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I always buy reasonably cheap Logitech keyboards.
But if you want the creme de la creme, you need to check out Optimus Maximus keyboard[^].
Or just anything using Cherry switches.
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Intriguing, but if I have to submit a budget for a keyboard design, then I think I will look at something a little more reasonably priced. Very intriguing though, especially with the configurable buttons on the left with customized icons.
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