How a Best-Selling Author Writes Flashbacks

To learn to write, dissect the best fiction writers.

That’s a lesson from James Altucher, one of my favorite writers. I’ve been doing it with opening lines.

This time, I read Dan Brown’s Angels and Demons through writer’s eyes.

Here’s how he writes flashbacks:

#1. A situation, character, or object triggers a memory that takes you to the past.

“Langdon wanted to say something to her, offer his sympathy. He too had once felt the abrupt hollowness of unexpectedly losing a parent. He remembered the funeral mostly, rainy and gray…“

#2. A sound, character, or external element takes you to the present.

After describing Langdon’s father funeral,…“The ping of an elevator pulled Langdon back to the present.”

That’s exactly how we daydream or time travel: a snap or tap on the shoulder takes us back.

TIL: How to Fix the Missing Deps File in Visual Studio

After updating Visual Studio last week, I woke up with this error message: The local resource “C:/Some/Path/Somefile.Deps” doesn’t not exist.

None of the projects inside my solution compiled. I cleaned it, recompiled it, and even restarted Visual Studio. None of that worked.

The problem was a broken NuGet source left behind after running my digital decluttering plan.

To honor the 20-min rule, buried in this StackOverflow answer was the solution:

  1. List all the Nuget sources with dotnet nuget list source
  2. Remove the broken source with dotnet nuget remove source <source-name>

Et voilà!

Mastering your IDE is just one of the 30 lessons in Street-Smart Coding—the roadmap I wish I had on my journey from junior to senior.

Do What You Don't Feel Like Doing

The right time to do something is when you don’t feel like doing it.

If you don’t feel like going to the gym, that’s when you should go. Don’t feel like getting out of bed? That’s when you should count up to 3 and get up. Don’t feel like writing? That’s when you should do it.

Today I didn’t feel like writing my daily post. To spice things up, I challenged myself to write this draft without looking at the text. I opened LibreOffice Writer, set the font to white, and wrote blindly.

A small, imperfect repetition is better than a broken habit.

Do what you don’t feel like doing today.

If you don’t want to get out of bed and want a change, check out these 10 ideas that changed my life and could change yours.

Kangaroos And The Road Sign (A 100-Word Fiction Story Inspired By a Photo)

Here’s May photo prompt from 100 word story and my story.

Nullarbor Warning Sign
Nullarbor Warning Sign. Photo by Chris Fithall on flickr.com

When some friends came over and you had some beers…

Every five minutes I asked, “Dad, when are we going to see kangaroos?”

I was 5 or 6. I had read every kangaroo book in the library.

My dad had rented a car. I didn’t care about Sydney and the Opera House. I only wanted to see kangaroos.

I don’t remember where we were, but we heard, puff!…and the car stopped. OMG! Smoke everywhere, hot as hell. “And the kangaroos?” I started to cry.

My dad crossed the road and took this picture. That was the only kangaroo I saw in Australia.

I’ll never rent a car. Ever.

Friday Links: Coding sucks, inverse laws of robotics, and Chrome surprises

Hey there.

Here are 4 links I thought were worth sharing this week:

#1. Coding sucks (9min) It’s not like building a house, but like jumping into a ship, nobody knows where it goes…And no, AI didn’t take our jobs. It was something else.

#2. Isaac Asimov created three laws for robots to interact with humans. If you’ve watched I Robot, you already know them. And here are three inverse laws for humans to interact with AI (9min).

#3. Did you know that Chrome installs a 4GB AI model (30min) without asking you?…And if you delete it, it installs it again. Surprise!

#4. I already knew about robots.txt, but there’s a whole folder to host those files (2min).


And in case you missed it, I wrote on my blog about why Star Wars is the best saga (3min) and 7 interesting but random ideas I found (2min).


(Bzzz…Radio voice) This email was brought to you by… Street-Smart Coding, 30 lessons to help you code like a pro. From Googling to clear communication, it shares the lessons to help you stand out in the age of AI.

May the Force be with you,

Cesar