Jonathan Gerlach

42 Followers
67 Following
59 Posts
Native app developer for Windows, iOS, etc.
If code had some kind of embedded information about its own complexity, could that be combined with other code complexity information at runtime to build a deterministic model of what will happen? If so, could a process scheduler do a game of Tetris with work and timeslices to do a better job than a more naive scheduler? Is this logically sound?
I'd love to see some sort of system that takes Dat/IPFS, SSB, ActivityPub and HTML to push the Web in a holistic way. I do want to be able to walk into a store with my phone and have devices acknowledge me SOLELY because of the information stored on my phone, not because of my device's UUID from Google. I'd love to authorize things using things I have on my person versus needing to trust large companies for this.

@kravietz yeah, that whole blogpost is bullshit.

Moxie's just trying to pretend it's not about "it's easier the centralized way". Which it is, but it doesn't make it okay.

Does anyone here know if Open NMT, the machine translation project, works well enough to use for everyday translation? I want to stop relying on google translate, if possible.
I really hate when communities use Slack. I have a Pinebook as my main laptop, and my phone cost $200 since I try to use cheap computers that last.

But Slack wants to use all of my RAM. I can't actually run it on most of my devices.
@sir rspamd is also a great addition, implements the opendkim and spamassassin stuff and greylisting in one tool.
@brainblasted Introducing Elixir by O’Reilley is good. Also the Phoenix library documentation is good if you want to learn by example. I’m currently doing both. Elixir + Phoenix + Ecto + Postgres.
@pry @sir It will output a C equivalent of the JavaScript code. Below is a console.log(“Hello”) compiled to C.
Cloudflare is having a major outage. My company's applications are inaccessible. Some other web applications that my team uses like InVision are down. Even cloudflare.com is down. Yay centralization!