<https://pilabor.com>
> My Alexa Echo Dot 4 sounds better than my home audio setup from the 90s.
I think it is more like a "good enough" sound. There are still are hifi-enthusiasts, but I think most people don't see the reason to spend a fortune just to listen to music. Mostly, because people don't even know what a difference a good hifi setup brings to your life or they just don't care.
I always wanted to try building the "World's best speakers"[1] by Technical Ingredients just for fun and education, but in the end I did not care enough to spend the time and money.
I think this is the way... OP is already doing the things that can be done.
You could try to educate more on how to do things right instead of trying to block anything that might freak her out, e.g. searching for pictures only on curated sites like pixabay.
However, basic filtering (adblock, kagi, DNS filter), trust and communication are the only things required in my opinion...
My first peer programming experience was exhausting. After 2 hours I was done for the day. After practicing for a few weeks, we could do around 4 hours split into 2 hour sessions without getting too tired. So it definitely has an effect to practice. Another positive aspect of it is (pretty likely) getting less distracted. You need a strong focus to concentrate on the task and the other person.
However, I think that peer programming does not work with everyone. Sometimes the peers do not match and getting work done is extra difficult. It also depends on the task. In my experience there were things that I could do better working alone, e.g. working on specification stuff like parsing a complex file format where I read a lot of documentation in the first place.
If you have someone to practice with, I think you could try to improve it and see how it works, but it should still be fun and not something you hate and you just need to do to improve.
Works, is really nice, thank you.
May I (auto-)suggest:
https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions
Have fun ;-)
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