597: How Many VS Code Plugins, Poor Charlie’s Almanack, and Where to Start in 2024?
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Show DescriptionWe're closing in on episode 600 and need your help to celebrate! Listen in to learn how to contribute to the episode. We're also talking GitHub desktop apps and code editors, how many VS Code plugins are needed, reading long form like Poor Charlie's Almanack, InVision shutting down, and answering our first Q of the year: how would you approach learning web development in 2024? Listen on Website →Links The most powerful Git client for Mac and Windows | Tower Git Client GitHub Desktop | Simple collaboration from your desktop Zed - Code at the speed of thought Tree-sitter|Introduction Panic - Nova JetBrains: Essential tools for software developers and teams Poor Charlie’s Almanack: The Essential Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger Stripe Press — Ideas for progress Engineering Management for the Rest of Us Stripe Press — Ideas for progress Stripe Press — The Dream Machine Stripe Press — The Making of Prince of Persia The Very Best Podcasts of 2023 The 25 Best Podcasts of 2023 - The Atlantic ‘Search Engine’ Podcast Brings Back the Joy of ‘Reply All’ UX design company InVision is shutting down this year Website design software | Adobe Dreamweaver Learn JavaScript, React, and TypeScript to Node.js, Fullstack, and Backend | Frontend Masters Learn from Emma Bostian's courses | Frontend Masters Trending - CodePen SponsorsJam.devYou’ve probably heard of Jam.dev, it’s used by more than 60,000 people. It’s a free tool that saves developers a ton of frustration. It forces your teammates to make the perfect bug report. They can’t do it wrong because it automatically includes a video of the bug, console logs, network requests, everything you need to debug. It automatically lists out the steps to reproduce. It’s so easy to get your teammates to use. It’s just a Chrome extension. When they see a bug, they click a button and right away it creates a ticket. So it saves time for them.
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