nstricevic | 2 years ago | on: My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file (2020)
nstricevic's comments
nstricevic | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
nstricevic | 4 years ago | on: How Watches Work
nstricevic | 6 years ago | on: GitHub Actions now supports CI/CD, free for public repositories
nstricevic | 7 years ago | on: A military technique for falling asleep in two minutes
1. Find a good place to nap. Use the same place every day. I used to nap under my desk on a lazy bag at my last job.
2. Quickly find a comfortable position. Quickly fix everything that bothers you (like watch on your wrist or anything else that's making you uncomfortable).
3. Start breathing from your stomach - not your upper torso. Your stomach should raise up and down, not your upper torso.
4. Relax your whole body. In the beginning, start by relaxing one by one region. First your toes. Then your lower leg, then your upper leg. Then the other leg... Until you relax your whole body. It should feel as your mind is separate from your body. Like it could go out of it. Your body should be completely numb. Later, as you progress, you will be able to relax your whole body with a few breaths. As if some force flows from your stomach and removes spasm from your body as you breath out.
5. Start removing thoughts from your brain. As you start thinking about something, just stop. Another thought comes in. Kill it. Just kill thoughts. You can think only about your breathing. Nothing else.
That's it. With these steps, I'm able to feel a sleep in just a few moments. I use that all the time.
Bonus: I have a special position that I "developed" that mitigates office sounds. I nap on my back, slightly turned on left side. I put my left ear on the pillow or a lazy bag. I put my right hand over my right ear and over my head. That way, a pillow isolates my left ear, while my right biceps isolates my right ear from sounds. I found this to be very effective.
Good luck napping.
nstricevic | 8 years ago | on: Pharo MOOC
Can you share this post, please?
nstricevic | 8 years ago | on: OVH Incident in Strasbourg
Does this happen often with OVH?
nstricevic | 8 years ago | on: Take Naps at Work
1. Find a good place to nap. Use the same place every day. I used to nap under my desk on a lazy bag at my last job.
2. Quickly find a comfortable position. Quickly fix everything that bothers you (like watch on your wrist or anything else that's making you uncomfortable).
3. Start breathing from your stomach - not your upper torso. Your stomach should raise up and down, not your upper torso.
4. Relax your whole body. In the beginning, start by relaxing one by one region. First your toes. Then your lower leg, then your upper leg. Then the other leg... Until you relax your whole body. It should feel as your mind is separate from your body. Like it could go out of it. Your body should be completely numb. Later, as you progress, you will be able to relax your whole body with a few breaths. As if some force flows from your stomach and removes spasm from your body as you breath out.
5. Start removing thoughts from your brain. As you start thinking about something, just stop. Another thought comes in. Kill it. Just kill thoughts. You can think only about your breathing. Nothing else.
That's it. With these steps, I'm able to feel a sleep in just a few moments. I use that all the time.
Bonus: I have a special position that I "developed" that mitigates office sounds. I nap on my back, slightly turned on left side. I put my left ear on the pillow or a lazy bag. I put my right hand over my right ear and over my head. That way, a pillow isolates my left ear, while my right biceps isolates my right ear from sounds. I found this to be very effective.
Good luck napping.
nstricevic | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (June 2016)
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: Yes, within Europe
Technologies: Full stack based on Ruby on Rails and JavaScript (Angular).
Résumé/CV: http://strika.info/cv.html
Email: [email protected]
nstricevic | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (September 2014)
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: Yes, within Europe
Technologies: Ruby on Rails, RSpec, Cucumber, JavaScript/CoffeeScript, Clojure
Resume: http://nebojsa.stricevic.info/cv
Email: [email protected]