Tag Archives: veeam

Weekly Notes 2026/23

  • 🏃️In last 5 months, I’ve ran over 320km, 680 more km to go in next 7 months. Pretty doable since running in winter is easier. It’s harder to run >4km without a good company.
  • These days I come across more and more apps broken in subtle ways. After the last update, my Android phone becomes unusable within a day unless I reboot it once a day. Android has started behaving now a bit like Windows! I feel anxious about updating anything (including Linux kernel).
    • Most annoying is when bluetooth and phone apps stops working in weird ways. I hear caller tune but no icon to pick the phone. If I switch off the bluetooth, I won’t switch on again unless I reboot the phone. Google playstore complains that I am not logged-in and BHIM stops working since googple play service complains that I am not logged in! 😪️
    • Web-apps are also broken in equally silly ways. One of my client uses a new and upcoming HR web-app which I always found annoying. These days, I loaded a few mega bytes of data on landing page, and that keeps changing its background images. Their login flow is mysterious once you are off the happy path. I just want to upload invoices. I’ve given up on it just send invoice over email.
  • I downloaded GST application for Linux to sign my filings. I wasn’t expecting it to work since it is a govt. app and it didn’t disappoint. It didn’t work.
    • It is a java application that requires Sun Java and doesn’t work with openjdk. I downloaded the Oracle java and ran it but again no dice. I asked Claude if it can help mitigate the sloppiness of my country men/women and it did a good job.
    • Apparently the developers (eMudhra) shipped Windows related files inside a Linux app. I don’t think anyone opened it on a fresh Linux machine before shipping. Claude was able to patch the app. Patch is available here https://github.com/dilawar/GSTSigner-linux . We Indians have a well-deserved reputation of being sloppy and lazy at everything we do.

Weekly Notes 2026/22

  • My neighborhood saw rain this week, decent amount. Mosquitos are back! Surprisingly there was no power-cut after first bout of strong winds. In last couple of years, they replaced naked aluminum wires with a bundle of insulated coated wires. Perhaps that helped.
  • I learnt a bit about “mock testing“. I thought it knew about it. The way it interacts with Rust’s trait was new to me. This weekend, I am going to collect materials on it.
  • Govt agencies are rarely known to be a place for efficiency and accountability but recent news of CBSE botching up student’s mark-sheet is a new low. I read that a “journalist” called the student who brought up the issue Pakistani and cockroaches! Why rush towards a new system just a few weeks before an event is beyond me?
  • I’ve never been a fan or admirer of any living politician. I find them necessary evil to be tolerated as long as we can potentially replace them next election cycle. I feel a bit sad when I meet someone who is. The job of citizens is to keep its government on it’s toes rather than touching its feet! Perhaps that is the issue: some folks want to be a subject rather than a citizen? A politician influencing ECI so brazenly is like watching a cricket team installing their own umpires in a match! What is left to celebrate after victory then?
  • Some psychologists claim that old people who are bhakt now were chamchas before. Why do they start worshiping Mr. Modi after so rudely disillusioned by Ms. Gandhi is beyond me. It would make a good Ph.D. thesis.
  • Powerful leaders, more often than not and surely in our country, cause more harm than good to the foundation of nation. What Ms. Gandhi did to civil services and press is not different than what the current government is doing to judiciary and press. These have long lasting effects that rarely gets corrected on its own. For a weaker judiciary and a spineless press and police are more useful for any politician doesn’t matter which party they belong to.
    • We have few examples in Europe to compare. In US, a cult of personality seems to be winning over a “check-and-balance” style of governance.
    • Reminds me of Gandhiji who deeply distrusted political parties in general and two parties system of US in particular. He thought that a two party system will eventually turn citizens against citizens. Despite finding Gandhiji politically naive, he sure has a point if you think beyond a few decades.
  • We sure have a thing for “powerful leaders”. Sadly even among people who should know better. Perhaps the educated class in this country is subconsciously aware of worthlessness of their education and degrees. I’ve seen them lining up behind Anna Hazare and Mr. Modi as if they couldn’t think of better ideas.
  • Even when your leaders are “good” and not interested in lining up his pockets or keep himself in the limelight, they can’t think beyond next election! Some leaders might enjoy nothing more than contesting elections because it gives them a high they can’t get by solving problems that may take more than a election cycle. The timescale of 5 years is too short in life of a nation to lay the foundation of semiconductor fabrication, improve primary education and health system and to improve universities. Might institutes that don’t have to think about their existence every five years help? I hope this to be largely the case but we also have institutes like DRDOs!
  • In may countries, political parties are also “institutes” for they easily outlive their current leaders. And these parties can think beyond election cycles though I find this to be rarer and rarer. In our style of society, we have factions rather than parties because they grow and wither with their ring-leaders.
  • Sure, one can ditch democracy and look for autocrats for they don’t seek votes. It might work in some cases for a few decades but when it doesn’t work, and it eventually win not, it is going to hurt really bad.

Weekly Notes 2026/21

  • Some rain this week on Tuesday. Cloudy week. Not bad. Running after the rain when there are no dust particles in the air is already pleasant.
  • People are still very confused about AI. What should it be used for and how much? What are its real benefits?
    • I wish there is little less AI content on my feed. LinkedIn is bad again but in a different way. HN and lobste.rs also have way too much AI on front-page. Some reddit communities are doing well but someone will mention AI somehow on every tech thread!
  • I’ve got GSTIN this year since I am mostly working as contract/freelance roles.
  • My phone has been misbehaving in mysterious ways for a few weeks now. Pressing call icon doesn’t work unless I restart!! GMail app is crashing when I try to open right panel, MS Team doesn’t sync calendar with system calendar anymore. Google Play complains that I am not logged-in but shows my google profile picture anyway and also refuse to show me “Log In” button because I am logged in. BHIM refuses to open unless I login to google play service but google won’t let me because I am also logged in and not-logged in at same time! A bit like Schrodinger cat. I am almost sure that these small small bugs are due to AI slop and compounding now. I hope this all ends badly soon enough so we can move on.
  • Skill rot due to AI use is real (at least for me). I am finding it very hard to write code manually now. The struggle to type by hand is mostly psychological. Like trying to wash dish by hands when you’ve gotten used to dishwasher and it working well, or driving manual after driving automatic. These analogies are from people on podcasts, and somewhat true. AI is mostly convenience driven programming.
  • This week I didn’t read anything carefully.

Weekly Notes 2026/20

  • No rain this week either! And the raw mangoes that I plucked last week are still sitting pretty in basket.
  • [jj](https://steveklabnik.github.io/jujutsu-tutorial/) promises to be a simpler git. I played with it this week but I still don’t get it. I like what they are selling though!
  • At work, I got my first MR merged into the codebase! Totally hand-written code, AI was used for on-boarding and rubber-ducking.
  • I vibe-coded a moderate complexity project — a PCB router like freerouter. I doesn’t work. The UI is excellent and it looks like that it almost work but it doesn’t. Now every prompt is like shouting into the void, things changes but were not fixed at all.
  • The successful vibe-coded projects and web-pages are working fine and looks OK as long as you don’t read the code carefully! I usually don’t notice big issues when skimming but as I soon as I try to understand the code, …!
  • I am going to write write most of the code by hand since it is quite possible at my new job where the codebase is managed by folks that are older and more conservative than me. Each MR goes through 5 to 6 reviews and it is expected that I understand every bit of it. So far, I am not convinced that I can “understand” a AI written code by reading it faster than writing it myself.
  • I love that I can treat AI an average senior developer who is always available to answer anything about the codebase and never judge you. Moreover, you are not scared of asking the dumbest possible question. It can also be used to learn patterns in the code-vase without mastering git grep and other search tools. And get a decent review of your MR.
  • Another good use case: it can copy-edit your first ‘vomit’ draft. Please write you own text. Then ask AI to copy-edit your brain vomit. DO NOT violate the first principle of writing — spend more time writing a text than others are expected to spend reading it. AI can also be used to rewrite your text for different type of users, e.g., add a “KT” focused post for fellow maintainers that highlight “how the code-base story is changing with this MR” (don’t use this exact phrasing in your AGENTS.md).

Reading list

Weekly Notes 2026/19

  • No rain this week either!
  • At work, my week was spent learning codebase and getting access. I finally have required access. I am dealing with a very large Rust codebase which is going through architectural refactor. Interesting times ahead.
    • After working with claude for a month, copilot feels like a little under-performer. Good thing is that I can avoid using AI agent at job if I want to. copilot could not even do a rebase with main!
  • I’ve been learning a bit about investments e.g. PPF, SSY and other fixed rate schemes. HDFC bank keep updating its app. New iteration has more pixel porn, and more stupid notifications over functionality and it requires too much resource. Fortunately, I’ve to use it occasionally. BHIM upi app is also slow and mild mannered as late Mr. Atal Bihari Bajpayee.
  • I plucked a few raw mangoes from the tree outside. Perhaps make some pickle?!

Reading list

  • Why Async Rust is a great post on, well, “why async rust”. It covers a bit of history as well, and talks about the design choices.
  • Zero-cost futures in Rust — why golang like “green threads” were not chosen for Rust. Some interesting bits from the post.
    Things really start getting interesting with futures when you combine them. There are endless ways of doing so, e.g.:
    • Sequential composition: f.and_then(|val| some_new_future(val)). Gives you a future that executes the future f, takes the val it produces to build another future some_new_future(val), and then executes that future.
    • Mapping: f.map(|val| some_new_value(val)). Gives you a future that executes the future f and yields the result of some_new_value(val).
    • Joining: f.join(g). Gives you a future that executes the futures f and g in parallel, and completes when both of them are complete, returning both of their values.
    • Selecting: f.select(g). Gives you a future that executes the futures f and g in parallel, and completes when one of them is complete, returning its value and the other future. (Want to add a timeout to any future? Just do a select of that future and a timeout future!)

Weekly Notes 2026/18

  • Two mild shower this week! Enough to clean my car and trees but not enough to clean roads. Still waiting for a proper rain.
  • I’ve to tweak my working setup quite a bit this week. I am working from home at my current role. I don’t/can’t use work laptop for personal stuff. I bought a KVM switch to share the keyboard, a few peripheral devices and screen with both work and home computer. It worked almost flawlessly. On macos, you may have to ensure that KVM is powered either via one of peripheral or via dedicated usb-c cable!
  • I also got a basic Yubi key (finally). I’ve using bitwarden and Zoho Vault my password manager. I prefer Zoho Vault since I can easily afford its paid plan. Zoho Vault doesn’t do well with Firefox profiles. This key is working fine except for GitHub which is refusing to save passkey to this key! Not sure why!
  • I’ve been thinking what side project to do this month. The AI has taken all the fun out of writing code. I hope this is temporary else I am in for a tough time. There hardly any other thing that I enjoy more than writing code with my clothes on. Well, hiking, cycling and cooking are fun but I can’t do them whole day!
  • I’ve been feeling a little low on energy for past few moths. Finally talked to a doctor. Lets see what comes out of my blood tests.
  • The income tax portal still not open for filing ITR. It says it will open “soon” but doesn’t specify dates! Some Reddit post claims that it will open by June 1, 2026! Though I find income tax dept websites and UPI infrastructure to be world class, they can be a little better at communicating changes.

Reading list

Weekly Notes 2026/17

  • I spent this week on-boarding at Toyota Connected India (TCIN) Bangalore office. At TCIN, you are expected to spend 5 days a month in office, either in one go or spread across entire month e.g. 1 day a week. My team prefer to gather in Bangalore office for a week and this was the week. So I went to office all 5 days to spend face-time with each of them even when most on-boarding call was from Chennai office.
  • The on-boarding week is relaxed but packed: meetings with HR, Admin, Finance, Legal etc. Each of them spent approximately an hour with me. Also at least one meeting per day with my team-mates on KT and codebase. I also get to see the hardware that runs Toyota dashboard.
    • TCIN office also has lunch inside the office and that solves a lot of problems for me. I can leave early to avoid traffic without having breakfast and have a light breakfast in office.
    • My experience at TCIN is pleasantly different than my last on-boarding at Veeam where I was mostly on my own to figure things out! I didn’t even know I had an HR at Veeam, he didn’t meet!
  • Ookie switched to a new school this week which has better activities and communication patterns.
  • Rains are still absent and temperature is soaring in Bengaluru. I hope mangoes will be sweater! Every year, in this month, I read about Bengaluru climate and weather and then forget all about it later. What causes rains in April? Returning Monsoon timelines?

Weekly Notes 2026/16

  • Very dry week. No sign of rain. The temperature is high and there is no forecast of rain either. I am hoping for next week to be bit cooler.
  • I gave a talk at a student club at APU.
  • I am joining Toyota Connected India next week. Pretty excited about writing Rust in safety critical systems.
  • I am getting a better grip on AI tools. I am still conflicted if I should continue to use them or go back to good old ways. Lets wait for a few more weeks.

Reading List

Weekly Notes 2026/15

  • First two weeks of April are usually the hottest weeks in Bangalore. Its less dry than the 2025 but only one light shower. The mangoes outside my house are growing nicely though.
  • Its been three weeks since I’ve written code by hand (except for a few tweaks). I am using Claude and sometimes qwen cli. Claude is definitely much better but qwen is quite capable at well scoped tasks.
  • I don’t think AI is replacing programmers anytime soon but sure making me dumber. It is becoming harder to focus, read docs and engage with a linear conversation. Also when I ran out of the credits, I had to push myself to open my editor and look at the code and I found it alarming.
    • My TLDR summary of AI is the following. It generates pig-iron and call it steel. You can build a fun Choo-Choo train with it over the weekend but please don’t build a proper train with it that carries hundreds of people. But can you resist?

Reading list

Weekly Notes 2026/14

  • For last three weeks, I am doing vibe coding for almost everything. It is helping me understand its power and limitation. I feel like everyone is right about AI. This reminds me a saying about India, “Whatever you can rightly say about India, its opposite is equally true.”.
  • Ookie is at her mama place for last two weeks. She will be back this Sunday. She is having very good time in Toranagallu.
  • I vibe coded an app https://github.com/dilawar/trim-dead-area to trim dead areas from a video (auto-crop to most interesting parts). It started off very fast but tweaking is extremely hard with mixed results. Learning about ffmpeg was a joy using Claude. More here https://dilawar.in/2026/vibe-coding-a-gui-to-auto-crop-dead-zones-from-a-video/.

Weekly Notes 2026/13

Growing mangoes in my neighborhood
  • The mangoes outside my home are growing bigger nicely. It’s finally nice to see fruits grow in the neighborhood.
  • It was a tough month at work. After thinking hard about my team work culture, my interaction with my manager, and his un-willingness to find me a new team (unless I am his relative), and consulting two of my manager friends, I decided to submit resignation.
    • I had a narrow escape at Bellary road while coming back from office. That also significantly contributed to the decision.
    • They are also moving office to a new location and that uncertainty also contributed to the decision.
  • I had another interview just after I submitted my resignation. You should not do both things at the same day, please! It went horribly wrong.
  • One Microsoft interview was in pipeline. I failed the fourth round (I guess). I am not keep on giving more interviews this year.
  • I am planning to do independent consultant work. I have already have two clients and it should be sufficient to get started. Lets see how it evolves.

Reading list

Weekly Notes 2026/12

  • All rounds of Toyota interviews are finally over. The HR discussion lasted 90 minutes. I enjoyed most of it.🤞
    • And they rejected! Apparently I am over qualified. Didn’t they know from the resume? The reason is perhaps something else — a wrong pause between sentences! I was under the impression that things are going very well.
  • Early this week, a light shower. The leaves of the mango tree outside my house are cleaned! It wasn’t strong enough to clean the dust from the road and wash my parked car. Two days later, we had a good enough rain that washed my car. The mangoes on the tree outside my home are big enough to pickle :-). This year March is not as hot as the last one. Already a few showers.
  • Due to LPG shortage, the restaurant near my workplace is serving a few items, mostly dosa, tea, coffee! At least they are open. But only a fraction of people are working. Everyone pays for the war expect for people who started it?
  • At work, use of AI tools are now compulsory. I am learning to use them, begrudgingly!
    • I already have a big win. I was given .NET6 codebase with empty readme file — a language I never wrote. I asked Claude to act as a staff engineer/product manager and walk me though the codebase and quiz me later. The purpose of walk-through: I can contribute to the codebase. It did a much much better job than a co-worker would have done. It saved me so many pings and emails.
  • I learnt more about AI tooling yesterday from a talk by a coworker. This blog post was also pretty helpful explaining how context window size impacts the quality of response.
    • When the context is filled, the quality of response suffers. The context size is typically 20,000 to 1,000,000. An archive paper is roughly 10,000 tokens. So its not very large!
    • Either you drop some of the context (loose information) or do compaction (summarize the context) and loose nuance. While compacting, pinning important information helps. Perhaps claude is already doing all that. For a general purpose chatbot, I see why this could be a hard problem to solve. A single word may have the most nuance.
  • In other news, uv, ruff and ty joins OpenAI. These tools are created by Astral. Many AI companies have been buying tooling (especially cli tooling).

Weekly Notes 2026/11

  • Tim Hoare has died. I re-read his Turing acceptance speech. Following paragraph felt poignant.
    “….At first I hoped that such a technically unsound project would collapse but I soon realized it was doomed to success. Almost anything in software can be implemented, sold, and even used given enough determination. There is nothing a mere scientist can say that will stand against the flood of a hundred million dollars. But there is one quality that cannot be purchased in this way– and that is reliability. The price of reliability is the pursuit of the utmost simplicity. It is a price which the very rich find most hard to pay.”
  • I had less than ideal on-boarding at new job. I was reminded some aspects of “Indian Workspace” I often hear people complaining on Reddit. Most of the things are fine but folks don’t care about notification sound being loud, talking next to you or having long and loud meetings. Moreover, everything lives in people head, not in documents. You must have meetings for doting ‘i’ and crossing ‘t’. Daily standup can last one hour!
  • Bengaluru has flower season. Its a pity that garbage on the road kills the view that could be spectacular. The GKVK campus road is blossoming.
  • Ookie can easily make 3-5 words phrases like “how about this one”. She is now 25 months old.
Ookie is 1 month old on March 17, 2024. These flowers were collected from a neighboring tree.
  • It was a pie day this week and I didn’t do anything. Not a single friend left in Bengaluru who reminded me of or would get excited about it. Last year, we had apple pies at 3:14pm.

Feb 21, 2026: Weekly Notes 2026/08

We celebrated Ookie’s second birthday on Feb 17. I found an excellent place for cake, Chiris Patisserie. Pretty costly, Rs. 1700 per kg but totally worth it! For birthday food, I ordered food from Chetty’s Corner from the neighborhood. Decent food. The kids loved the pizza and burgers. As expected, only folks who stay in the neighborhood showed up. Anu sent some gifts for daycare — rainbow pencils and pouches for kids. People shouldn’t send food to the daycare on birthdays especially chocolate or other sugary stuff. I don’t like Ookie eating chocolate at daycare at this age!

  • I had a mild runny nose the whole week! It was very hard to sit at the desk and do any work for a long time.
  • This Friday was my last day at Dognosis. I’ll probably engage with them as consultants occasionally. Before starting my next job, I’ll spend some days at Puducherry this week. I’ll be meeting Somya, her husband and possibly a few more friends. It will be the first time both Kaalu and Ookie will both see the beach and the sea.
  • I am collecting reading materials to prepare for my new job. Mostly about microservices, API design and related DevOps.
  • Someone from datameet group cleaned up data of the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS). It is available at https://india-plf-survey.pages.dev/. The average earnings are still pretty bad <Rs 20,000 per month! Much touted IT/Software doesn’t even break into of professions that employ more than 0.3% of workforce.
Software/IT doesn’t even show up in the top contributor (>=0.3%) to employment in India.

Feb 14, 2026: Weekly Notes 2026/07

  • My second round at Fortanix was a failure!
    • It was a medium leetcode question to be solved inside a browser. Yes, a leetcode for senior roles and that too in a browser! I mostly use vim with a buttload of plugins. Maybe I should start asking if leedcode in browser would be used for evaluation and just say no.
  • Review article of a very interesting book. Here is a mindmap from Reddit.
  • An old friend, Somya Mani and her husband John, came to visit Monday morning. Flight from Vienna to Bengaluru took almost half day and both of them super tired. Both slept after having breakfast. I got busy with office meeting and they went to their hotel. We may have dinner sometimes this week.
  • The engineering workflow that I designed for my current employer might get adopted this week. One of the founders is very interested in it and we refined it over the weekend. Tomorrow I need to sell it to the team. Ideally I should practice the presentation. I will if I get some time in the morning before I drop Ookie to the day care.
  • Many of the street lights in my neighborhood don’t have a proper switch. I’d loved a light sensor based but a manual one is also fine since labor is cheap. But the current way is monumentally bad and pretty dangerous. 
  • I opened account on to learn trading! My niece has been sending me screenshots of how much he is making every day. I made 2500 in half an hour from 10k investment and lost 8k next day. This platform requires constant attention which I don’t have. I’ll probably learn a few more things with very little amount of money and move on. Its not for me. It is pretty addictive though.
A dog is scratching himself in a sunny February day in Bengaluru, India

February 01, 2026 – Weekly Notes

  • I spent last month (Jan 2026) interviewing and job hunting. I have one offer that feels good, and I may receive another by the end of this week. I also have one interview left that starts next week.
  • I really enjoyed Veeam’s interview process. The Toyota interview went great as well. I was a bit disappointed with Cloudflare’s process—I was expecting them to reschedule after I missed the second round.
  • Kaalu is now officially overweight. She weighs 25 kg; her ideal weight is 20 kg. Dieting doesn’t work since the whole neighbourhood feeds her, and she eats competitively outside.
  • I’m thinking of migrating from Notion to WordPress. Notion is great at what it does, but the publishing options are less than ideal. I’m also reluctant to pay $12 per month for it. They should bring back the $5 personal plan! It feels like they’re moving more toward enterprise users.
A black dog is resting in her bed

January 10, 2026: Weekly Notes 2026/02

  • I’m trying to set up an engineering workflow at Dognosis (my current employer). After brainstorming with ChatGPT, I ended up with a template: Engineering Workflow Rhythm for a 20–100 Person Startup.
  • I clearly spelled out what I was looking for in the prompt—and what I didn’t want:
    • The first thing in the week is a short meeting; everyone should know they’ll work independently for the rest of the week.
    • Every Friday, we review work, update status, and report to stakeholders.
    • During the week, no cat herding. Each engineer acts like a professional and is treated like one (I don’t ask for updates).
    • Write before talking. Every meeting must have a written agenda.
  • I did the same exercise with Gemini. The results were not to my liking. ChatGPT’s responses were short, pointed, and—most importantly—felt implementable. Gemini, on the other hand, used language I don’t usually hear from good engineers. It added phrases that would make a PHB from Dilbert proud.
  • You may also like this post:Small projects, clear scope | Swizec Teller, along with his other posts on related topics.
  • I used to think std::move was C++’s way of implementing Rust-like move semantics. Turns out it’s another confusing monstrosity created by the committee that doesn’t do what it sounds like (f**king RAII?). std::move doesn’t move anything: A deep dive into value categories. Academic-type people should never be in charge of a language—or anything used by many people. Get a few normal programmers onto the committee, you C++ 😡.
  • 💡 Suddenly there’s a lot of incoming interest in my resume. Either the job market is heating up, or my resume is finally making sense to people. I spent over three months tweaking it (revisiting once a week). Talking to AI about my resume helped a lot.
  • 💬 I gave a few interviews this week.
    🚗 Toyota Connected is almost done. It’s Rust + firmware + software-defined vehicle work, which I’m pretty excited about. The interview itself was very pleasant: the technical team asked relevant questions and were very friendly. I felt comfortable after the first five minutes and didn’t suffer from brain fog.
  • Another interview was with a seemingly good company working in the secure computation domain. Senior leadership described the role one way, while the interviewer described it differently. The interviewer was very focused on dotting i’s and crossing t’s on a LeetCode question—and asked me to write code in Google Docs! I’m not really sure what he wanted to see. You meet every kind.
  • I had a first round with Cloudflare. I applied for a zero-trust and data-protection–focused role. They have the network, they have the edge—I wouldn’t be surprised if they start offering secure enclaves and other services where “trust” is explicitly computed.
  • A few surprising moments in the first round: I wasn’t expecting a technical screening but rather a discussion about the role and engineering problems with a manager. It turned out I’m in their general hiring pipeline, which means a phone screen by a manager first. Perhaps I’ll talk to the relevant team later. Not great, but not a deal-breaker.
  • I went through the round and felt I did average. I said a few very dumb things and had some brain fog. We finished early, which I really liked. +1 to the manager for keeping the agenda tight and being professional. I wasn’t very surprised when I was moved to the next round.
  • After that, I did something embarrassing. I made an off-by-one error in real life and ended up missing my second round 😢. I scheduled it for early Saturday morning (00:00 hrs) but marked my desk calendar for Sunday morning. Strong DND settings on both my phone and desktop made it impossible to error-correct—there was no persistent notification. Very unprofessional on my part, though I’m not mad at DND at all.
  • I sent an apology to the interviewer and asked to reschedule, but I’m not sure if this error is recoverable. Let’s see.
  • Three more opportunities are in the pipeline—all incoming interest, and all pretty interesting: hardware/algorithm development for space satellites, Windows security kernel development, and a data backup and protection SaaS.