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Need to start learning to take notes consistently. My idea now, to kick-off this process, is to open a daily note in obsidian every day at the start of the day in which I will keep crude, quick notes.
Then at the end of the day I shall take some time to go over the notes and refine them. Not yet sure if that refinement will already be the end result or if i should go over refined notes again at maybe the end of each week to see if they really stick.
I should commit notes to git to save them.
Use taskwarrior to keep track of todo's.
`task <filter> <command> [ <mods> | <args> ]`
commands can be abbreviated as long as they dont become ambigious.
Tasks can be recurring.
See `man task`, specially the CONTEXT section, because i'm always confused about the context, `task context none` to unset the damn thing.
Annotate tasks that are critical with the critical tag, `task <ID> annotate +critical` or `task add +critical blaat`
Upgraded to taskwarrior3. Should set-up a task server to synchronize tasks to so I don't lose all of them if my laptop dies.
Don't forget to always read man pages. Maybe I should create a detailed note about how to use man pages.
I will start going to the office full-time from now on.
I should make sure my Obsidian notes and taskwarrior tasks are kept safely in a git repo in case i lose my laptop.l
Today I learned that we can influence the output of `rabbitmqctl list_queues` , we can append it with keywords of columns that it should show, this also allows us to reorder them to set those pesky names on the end to have nicer formatting.
`rabbitmqctl list_queues messages consumers name` shows messages accumulated in Q and the number of consumers it has and then ends with the name. Of course this is explained in the manpage which I should read more often as noted before.
I should ask for a diagram of the current systems and take note of it, e.g what is OneCRM / OneHOP / OneHome and all that.
To upgrade a single package using apt we can use `apt-get install --only-upgrade <packagename>`.
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