@freemo makes sense, but it's not even readable and breaks my web UI :D Also this was supposed to be a reply to https://mas.to/@pkalbers/111502221591441892 but didn't work right for some reason. That might've been me clicking the wrong thing though, but check it out yourself.
@nixCraft print("Hello World!")
@stux thicker walls might add to the feeling of solid confined space alike the IRL spaces it was based on, the thin walls seem less oppressive and somewhat fake. Just my 2 cents, this is cool.
@sanket143 god I love open source software unconstrained by corporate soullessness.
@codefolio @katafrakt the processes+threads honestly still sound like a major downgrade compared to actor models of things like Scala or the Erlang family (and it seems Ractors if they ever happen), where concurrency is intuitive to implement and a first-class element of the language, and all internal functionality is thread-safe (this part seems to not entirely be the case for Scala lol) and GIL-less by default.
Not enough to warrant abandoning Ruby like when it was single-threaded, mind you, but enough to make something like Elixir strongly preferred over it if you're choosing the technology to start with.
@katafrakt what's the current concurrency model of modern RoR?
@dosnostalgic damn, as a kid I was shocked by christmas lights with the insulation worn out on both sides of the plug, but that's nothing compared to your experience. Glad you're alive.
@icedquinn @freemo sweet jesus Pooh, that's not honey! You're eating Modern Monetary Theory!
Inflation depends purely on the supply of currency in circulation. To be able to "take away" money via taxes to counteract inflation caused by "infinitely printing" money they'd have to destroy the tax money or at least never spend it, ever. This entire theory is a very roundabout way of stating the simple fact that "government takes taxes to fund its spending" in a way that justifies either a) "muh economy is bullshit, let's print more money to make everyone rich" or b) "muh economy is bullshit and just a pretend tool of the authoritarian government to do what it wants".
MMM is interesting because it's used on both sides of the political spectrum in an attempt to mask bad economy takes.
@lanodan @coolboymew there's a picture of that somewhere but I can't find it :-/
@lanodan @coolboymew apparently the Event Horizon Telescope (global array of radio-telescopes) uses people flying on planes with suitcases full of HDDs as the main form of data transfer.
> Each telescope records at a rate of 64 Gbps, and each observation period can last more than 10 hours. This means each site generates around half a petabyte of data per run. With each site recording simultaneously, Blackburn said the high recording speed and sheer volume of data captured made it impractical to upload to a cloud.
@coolboymew the funniest part is that occasionally someone does strap whatever the current equivalent of a terabyte SD card is to a homing pigeon and beats an ISP in throughput. I've seen news of one of those cases relatively recently. (This year or the past couple of years.)
@freemo hey, it is the fault of capitalism. Wouldn't have high cost of cars and homes without cars and homes available to the public in the first place.
@ercanbrack only a third? Last time I saw mine it was about 50% ads and "suggested posts" ie ads but for facebook pages.
They simply realised that Facebook users will at this point accept any treatment, no matter how bad, as long as they can still kind of use the service.
@icedquinn @freemo it's not that hexagons fit the space better, it's just that they have a more physically stable structure. Which is pretty useful when the comb hangs its significant weight off its wax structure.
Hey, would you look at that! I wrote another conformant Vulkan implementation...
https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/news-and-events/nvk-reaches-vulkan-conformance.html
Software developer, open-source enthusiast, wannabe software architect. I like learning and comparing different technologies. Also general STEM nerd.