I spent a decent amount of time making a nice web application to wrap up the functionalities of yt-dlp, makes it really easy to follow content through Jellyfin!...
I hadn’t even realized VSCodium has it’s own extension marketplace, I hadn’t used it myself. Thanks for prompting me on this, I went ahead and published it there too! open-vsx.org/extension/ctfam/btrfs-file-history
Hopefully my namespace gets verified soon and the warning will go away.
As the title says, you probably guessed it already. For work I mainly develop on the .NET platform using a Windows device, but at home I enjoy all the benefits of a good OS....
I’m a professional and hobbyist C# .NET dev and I recently made the switch to a full Linux environment at home. I’ve gotten a great workflow setup with just VSCode and some extensions. I’ve actually found some ways to improve my workflow with VSCode vs Visual Studio and I’m glad I made the switch. The only thing I really miss is the phenomenal diagnostics and profiling I would get with a full Visual Studio install, but I’m getting used to using cli dotnet tools to replace that as well.
If you’re going the VSCode route, feel free to ask me more questions on useful extensions or workflow tweaks!
I haven’t really distributed any binaries yet, everything I work on is just FOSS at github.com/MattMckenzy.
However, I did look into packaging my HomeCast project in my own debian apt repository. It’s still unsigned at the moment, but when I get to it I imagine I’ll just use dpkg and gnupg2 however I need to.
I created a web application as an easy way to use yt-dlp! (github.com)
I spent a decent amount of time making a nice web application to wrap up the functionalities of yt-dlp, makes it really easy to follow content through Jellyfin!...
Created a VS Code extension to find and compare a file's BTRFS snapshot history (marketplace.visualstudio.com)
I recently put together a small VS Code extension to help grab and compare file versions from my BTRFS snapshots history....
Any C# devs want to share their setup?
As the title says, you probably guessed it already. For work I mainly develop on the .NET platform using a Windows device, but at home I enjoy all the benefits of a good OS....