I used to rely on labml daily/weekly trending papers which was informed by Twitter trends, to help me stay out of Twitter. But sadly they recently stopped updating it due to Twitter API costs.
- Streamlit for very simple frontend, you can code in Python.
- TailwindCSS + Vue. Very easy to pickup and you can learn only a small part of it to get your website working. (There are many templates of components to get you going quickly).
I'm actually the opposite, I know some frontend but struggle to get backend working for my side projects.
Try embedding, semantic search, retrieval, and plugging the relevant parts into the prompt.
You may need:
- summarizer prompt to summarize your project structure, main functions, methods.
- vector store/database to store and retrieve your relevant code from code base
- coder prompt to write code based on the retrieved part.
+1 for Obsidian! I tried a number of things over the years - OneNote, Notion, emacs + org-mode, but I've finally settled on Obsidian, with the files backed up in a git repo. I love the clean UI and the tagging features.
You can actually easily incorporate activities in your daily routines. Get a standing desk, do some quick stretches/body-weight exercise after 40 min of coding, march/bike in place while watching videos/TV, stroll afer meals, etc.
Getting a pedometer app also helps. If you're self-monitoring your activity level, there's a great chance you'll try to improve it (consciously or unconsciously).[1]
Allow me to advertise our app: Pacer Pedometer[2]. It comes with activity tracking, fun virtual activity challenges, healthy lifestyle lessons, guided body-weight exercise etc. We also have a corporate plan in which you can join challenges with your colleagues.
- Daily Newsletter on AI: https://tldr.tech/ai
- Subreddit about open-source LLM advancements: https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/