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I used to use a .txt file like this for over 10 years that I edited with Vim and could also edit on my phone using Dropbox. And then I used the Mac Notes app and realized the search, sync, autosave experience, and other properties made Notes way more useful for me.

Similarly, for over 10 years I used to compile my CV with LaTeX using a fancy template I designed, until I realized the time it took to edit it was just not worth it. So I pasted it into a Google Docs file with Arial font and just text bullet points and no rich text features. My life became way easier and my CV looks way less annoying.

(This may be irrelevant to the original post but) I found that a lot of the optimizations I thought were good for me were stemming from an unnecessary attachment to a minimalist technical aesthetic.



> Similarly, for over 10 years I used to compile my CV with LaTeX using a fancy template I designed, until I realized the time it took to edit it was just not worth it.

I went the opposite way - trying to typeset[1] in word processors just became too hard as changed CV to emphasise some things over others.

My CV[2] in LaTeX was extremely quick to adjust for someone else who wanted an identically formatted CV.

[1] I like the ability to do proper boxes all over the page for things that require box-models, like advertisments, which is what your CV actually is!

[2] In case you are interested in what the output looks like: https://www.lelanthran.com/downloads/resume-1page.pdf


Not trying to be negative, but the photo on your resume looks to me like a "negative" face.

Not to say a picture like that should be happy smiling or linkedin look, but yours look like you are having a bad time.

Although I'm from US where pictures aren't on resumes.


I agree, I will change it.

Now that I look at at it properly, I look constipated :)


The same exact thing happened to me and I came to the same exact realization. I moved all my dot files to an archive and started using built-in software. It's been great.


> used the Mac Notes app

But then it's not Vim.

That was a little tongue in cheek, but seriously, I need Vim when I write/edit text. Currently have a todo.txt that's on iCloud.


Haha. I still use Vim for coding and for the rare occasions where I need to edit text that needs to be in a plain txt file.




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