@BE This is what it felt like in 1996 and 1997 when the masses got on the internet. In a sense it's what looks like when you succeed in changing the world: the changed world still has the same people in it.
@kate To me this looks like "WebKit is the new Internet Explorer", except this time it's getting buyin from the W3C *before* adding new features the other browser doesn't support, instead of afterward. I don't know if you remember document.layers.
@lcamtuf YouTube search provides better search results than Google search. If search for "foo" tutorials on Google, if "foo" is something you could conceivably buy, you often get the Wikipedia article on "foo" and dozens of foo merchants. Search on YouTube and you get actual tutorials (and, often, product reviews by shill channels, but still reviews that show a foo in real use). The HTML pages are often still out there but don't show up in the search results.
Also, videos are objectively better for learning about woodworking, where things like visual texture, motion, and three-dimensional relationships are important; but not, I think, quantum physics. For software it can be helpful to see how an expert user uses the software, especially if it has a GUI, but often a manual would be better.
Hello new #API developers who've come here from Twitter.
I've written some guides to help you get started with the #MastdonAPI
Includes how to build #bots, grab conversations, and use search effectively.
Read them at: https://shkspr.mobi/blog/tag/mastodon/
@lxo Probably, but maybe it'll still be crashing. More likely a much smaller Twitter will have more or less stabilized by that point. Hopefully it won't elect another Trump.
#Underline text in different lightweight markup languages:
Emacs #OrgMode , Muse:
_this_
#DokuWiki:
__this__
There is no Markdown syntax for underlined text, but #pandoc's #Markdown reader treats the content of spans with class "underline" or "ul" as #underlined:
[important]{.underline}
[nota bene]{.ul}
@harudagondi I find it helps to write some clients for the API first. Even unit tests can be good.
@lxo No, I still think it'll be very interesting to see what looks like six months from now!
@atomicpoet @mmasnick If Twitter collapses like Digg did, maybe it will prevent the Unitedstatesans from re-electing Trump? Is hard to imagine the necessary degree of insane polarization being sustainable on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook alone. Maybe the alt-right will collapse too.
@jwz Also can these ghosts do Reed-Solomon coding?
"[Lossless Convexification of Nonconvex Control Bound and Pointing Constraints of the Soft Landing Optimal Control Problem](http://larsblackmore.com/iee_tcst13.pdf)", #controltheory paper by Behçet Açıkmese, John M. Carson III, and Lars Blackmore, the guy who got the #SpaceX rockets to land on their tails like CGI special effects.
Abstract: "*Planetary soft landing is one of the benchmark problems of optimal control theory and is gaining renewed interest due to the increased focus on the exploration of planets in the solar system, such as Mars. The soft landing problem with all relevant constraints can be posed as a finite-horizon optimal control problem with state and control constraints. The real-time generation of fuel-optimal paths to a prescribed location on a planet’s surface is a challenging problem due to the constraints on the fuel, the control inputs, and the states. The main difficulty in solving this constrained problem is the existence of nonconvex constraints on the control input, which are due to a nonzero lower bound on the control input magnitude and a nonconvex constraint on its direction. This paper introduces a convexification of the control constraints that is proven to be lossless; i.e., an optimal solution of the soft landing problem can be obtained via solution of the proposed convex relaxation of the problem. The lossless convexification enables the use of interior point methods of convex optimization to obtain optimal solutions of the original nonconvex optimal control problem.*"
@ilpincy @abde I think a lot of the programming language design space remains unexplored. In large part is because many of the big wins at the language level happened early (named variables, automatic jump address calculation, infix expressions, conditionals, functions, garbage collection, dynamic typing) and, except for experimentation, reuse commonly trumps potential linguistic advantages.
To be concrete, is better to use OpenCV than to reimplement it in a better language.
I've been using #AnnotatedEquations in my recent papers. I think it really adds to the readability and understanding of the math.
Here are some examples. It uses #tikz in #latex.
Let me know if you like it. Happy for any feedback.
@AccordionGuy I see, thanks!
@AccordionGuy Hmm, will 5000 hurried people make that much of an impact on the healthcare system of a city of 750k? And I think the whole SFBA is almost ten million.
One of my pals told me my Twitter comments were as viscous as AOC and Nancy Pelosi. I though everyone’s were like that! I just got used to it. As much as you can. It’s nothing short of astounding to me that I can just post and engage on here and people respond in a way that seems normal and real. The Twitter comments world is distorted and dangerous. I don’t see how twitter can be fixed. We’re better off here. ❤️
@jwz I guess depends on whose walls you walk through, no? Surely there's times a few ghosts spying on SFPD or San Francisco City Council members could have avoided some trouble for DNA.
Birdsite
https://nitter.net/TechEmails/status/1575588277700026368 has the purported conversation between Dorsey and Musk from March about how Twitter should become "an open source protocol, funded by a foundation of sorts that doesn't own the protocol, only advances it". Purportedly the thread was made evidence in the Twitter v. Musk lawsuit.
If that's the plan, firing most of Twitter's employees does seem like a good first step.
@jwz Man, if I could walk through walls and be invisible and not have to work for a living, I tell you what, I gain all KINDS of knowledge.
I read a lot. Sometimes I learn things. I like making things. I think reading and doing are complementary.