Lupinity Labs

11 Followers
18 Following
15 Posts

Mastodon Account of Oliver Matla - freelance platform-agnostic developer.
Mainly tooting about the Laravel ecosystem. Currently on a VILT stack adventure.

For confidential messages, use PGP 38FE6B8B34161B5C20D74103F61981C02CFA530A

Githubhttps://github.com/lupinitylabs

@menelion This has always been a reality for me. That's how I eventually grew to be a full-stack developer.

There are very few customers who can afford the luxury of having a dedicated frontend team. And even for those who had, my prototype usually ended up being final 😆

@stefanzweifel @filament How does Filament know about adding the "Current monthly usage will be reset to this value" and "If checked, notifications are sent again when user reaches different usage threshold" text without any code? ðŸĪ”

@brbcoding I mean, ok - English is not my native tongue. But if it's in the Cambridge Dictionary...

So if I had quoted the sentence from Collins Dictionary, would the FBI arrest me for having threatened the (future) president?

I'm really lost for words 😂

@brbcoding As it turned out, it's not a bug, it's a feature:

So that is what happens if your software team thinks it's a great idea to filter all tweets for stopwords like "shoot yourself" ðŸĪŠ

...and automatically ban people based on that.

As it turns out, the bone of contention was a tweet replying to someone stating that C++ was the best language around:

Nice 😂

My Twitter account just got suspended for promoting self-harm or suicide.

Since I only tweet about software development, I was quite surprised and appealed the decision.

@afilina Depends on what you do on deploy. We are generally building the production assets in development and commit them. Thus, there are usually no npm packages needed on production, no build steps and deployment is just instant.

And since using vite, building only takes a couple of seconds.

@danharrin @filament A head amputation is no fun. Had two of those already, but they keep growing back...

Interesting... I got a message that someone logged into my #Mastodon account from an unknown IP that seems to resolve to vultr, some cloud hosting agency.

My password is random and > 128bit, so guessing or brute forcing is highly unlikely.

Does this have anything to do with the maintenance or should I be worried about something? @ramsey