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Personal documentation, it's good for me, but is it also something good to have in CV in some format? #44

@Mikaela

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@Mikaela

Me (and titlebot) in my discussion rooms:

https://github.com/readme/guides/private-documentation - I think most of my git activity is unintentionally this without having realised
Title: You future self will thank you: Building your personal documentation · GitHub
ssh-allowed_signers and pgp-alt-wot ? Not having to remember those things constantly. Ruokajutut, obviously this for food (and it needs love)
mikaela.info - some blogposts and especially everything /r/ /or/ /ir/ are things worth remembering to get something. Like https://mikaela.info/r/coauthor was something someone at WTOP needed
shell-things? Exactly this with all the configs for random apps and services like chrony, sshd, systemd units, everything
gist? Treasure trove of easy ways to manage Matrix, Element, IRC, even how to do the laundry (why does the machine have so many options I never use anyway), it just has a lot
scripts and PPFI-im - I don't need to look up how to for loop or similar again as it's all there with examples that are practical to me
my only public repos that aren't directly personal documentation are cv, GitHub profile readme and language resources

I have #33, is this documentation skill or a sign of being organized or something else? If The ReadME project writes about it, it must be good for something

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