These are some links of the resources that might help all who are more into the code development part using Linux. I am posting only those who are relevant to the code development:
I had a subscription to all of them but too much, so unsubscribed and i dont read all of them so you can bookmark and read as and when you like:
I have no association with the people who develop these weekly news letter, you can subscribe or unsubscribe as you like and every normal person do the same, when they want to add something they read more and subscribe to everything and when they are working on specific then they unsubscribe. You can also bookmark and read them as archive.
Resources and links for learning Linux, Linux projects, etc.:
Seeedstudio - Seeed Studio is an innovative IoT technology company specializing in hardware research, production, and sales for edge computing, network communication, and smart sensing applications.
DistroWatch - popular website that tracks and provides information about Linux distributions and other open-source operating systems. It serves as a resource for users looking to discover, compare, and download various Linux distributions and BSDs.
I recently came across this web such as forcoder.net or codeprog.com and there are couple of like these distributed over, which is providing a good collection of books and courses. Seems like they have a lot of traffic and they ask to click pictures to prove you as a human, which is worst and without clicking on those images, it wont give the download link. I wish they should have avoided this clicking images and crap, such dirty images and crap you have to click. I tried multiple times refreshing the pages to download one and it didnt worked out, so in the end you have to click what they ask to click and the download link comes. Nothing that i put there.
If you want to read and see then you can visit and read. I also come to know this about from another community so i putting here.
Here is another one which is really good if you are doing deep learning : https://www.deeplearningweekly.com/ i read this almost and i have no subscription through email (unsubscribed) and i read this as and often through the web.
I thank you for sharing those and being a literate and well informed person, i appreciate everything that can bring substantial knowledge and i invest my time and my resources in only that direction so that meaningful results can be achieved, so i thank this for sharing those.
Here is another resource if you want to learn RUST: https://rust-osdev.com/, which has a very steep learning curve but of very high value.
This is a resource which i can suggest, whether to read and make use of it or not that is totally upto you. I am using this to understand this, so i thought of sharing as RUST like GO is a system programming language.
I learnt GO in less than a month and it is not about that the GO language is easy, it is not. It is mainly, because i used C++ long time, so for me it getting around Go, which comes from C, was fast and since being typed language, i prefer that as i know what i am declaring and what i have to use when and where.
I do GO code a lot and since coming from C++, want to see RUST as least that is a useful addition and proper investment of my abilities. So if you want to gain and add, read that and add and if not then skip.
I simply watch this, read 2-3 books and then write more code as without writing it, you don’t know and when you have no visible results means that you either dont know or else i don’t see a reason.
So i believe any intelligent person will estimate quickly whether to differentiate from a person who is capable of showing results and the one who is not.
Here you can see what i am following: codecreatede (Gaurav Sablok) / Following · GitHub for each language. I only follow those in which i am writing and which i am using and nothing specific, so might be of interest to you all
I spent my day today reading this book in library and didnt even got a chance to open the laptop: Rust. Das umfassende Handbuch | Rheinwerk Verlag This book is so well written in RUST that it explain mainly the way of writing RUST better for the containers and also BTreeMap.
I finished reading almost 40% of the book today only and i thought no one was there in the library, even thought there were many, so good written.
Give a try if you want to do learn the same for your place of work. Upgrading yourself means bringing the good to your workplace.
I no longer download anything from these websites. I am not sure whether you can or not but i no longer download since last more than 2 weeks as i am not interested in clicking pictures and also downloading anything.
Here is the Go weekly newsletter: https://newsletter.appliedgo.net if you are learning GO. I now read through web and no longer subscribe to it. A good collective examples of GO.
Here is another weekly resource https://dataelixir.com. I unsubscribed it and now i have no subscription to any daily or weekly resource, only read through the online ones.
Give it a try if you want to add something new to your abilities or for your employment.
I’ve been listening to this podcast for a couple of years. It’s out of the UK, led by Joe Ressington. It’s a weekly podcast and a lot of fun. These guys have been doing this a long time - you can learn a lot here.
Well, they mention my letter in this past week’s episode - ep 305, which is kind of cool. It’s about whether Windows 10 end of support next year will help bring more people to Linux - they didn’t think so and neither do I - haha. But I can try. Actually, they have episodes going back years, so if you page through them they list the topics they cover in each episode. Love these guys. Thanks, Hayden.
Right - and supposedly they already have a fee structure in place for extended support for business users of Win 10 after Oct 2025. As far as I know, they haven’t decided how much they will charge the home user for extended support yet, and it may be reasonable enough.
But I agree with the LNL guys that it probably won’t drive many people to the Linux desktop, at least not non-technical folks. Though as Joe said, it may result in more ‘obsolete’ laptops flooding the market for us Linux users to convert.