> I assume most languages have a thing like that. You're not wrong, I assume. My problem is specifically with the remaining languages without anything like that. :')
Zod is by far the most ergonomic way to express those ideas in TypeScript these days. I miss it when writing code in other languages. The friction with the rest of the ecosystem is real, though. Most code out there…
Surveillance is worse than slop. Also seems like an disproportional use of resources compared to free formats and editors we already have today. This product is in bad taste, and I hope it doesn't succeed.
Should work fine if you can run Zoom through Firefox.
Has anyone managed to boot it on bare metal using an AM5 motherboard? I tried booting various Illumos distros through USB sticks on two different AM5 computers, and it got stuck very early on. I assume due to some…
Is it common for the toolkits written from scratch in Rust to have bindings for other languages? I still think the ideal solution for Desktop GUIs would be the Qt company developing first class Qt bindings for Node.js…
> without copyright, all of the profit made on creative works (of a perhaps smaller pie) would get be kept by distributors like Amazon or Netflix Assuming copyright gets dismantled is a good-faith way, Netflix/Amazon…
I've always wondered if JS engines could rewrite those array functions at compile time, like this: https://github.com/SomeRanDev/Haxe-MagicArrayTools Though, it probably wouldn't work if user code modified the Array…
> Sorry if my objection came across as overly antagonistic Apologies accepted, no worries. > while your experiences are unassailable as your experience, it may not be very representative of what's out there. Of course.…
https://codeberg.org/thi.ng/umbrella/src/branch/develop/pack... That's an interesting take at ECS, seems to do lots of optimizations under the hood too. I'm surprised to not have heard of those libraries until now.
>Agents used to be bad at this kind of stuff in my workplace as well, but newer models + agent-friendly documentation + AGENT.md begging agents to read the fucking docs before coding changed this landscape for us here.…
> Then you either really haven't tried very hard to notice them or have been in an academic environment with severe defects. Sure. (?) > Does college even work for future economic prospects, by the way? Where I live, a…
I guess you and the other poster just have different standards. I've personally never found Ray Tracing to be worth the performance impact. I have a 3090 and a 7900 XT at home, on different computers. When opening a new…
> You go to a university because you are deeply interested in understanding the subject that you study. I don't think I've met anyone who fits that description. The ones deeply interested in the subject would likely…
Depending on your access patterns, maybe you could have a hash table mapping entities ids to indexes in your SoA. Perhaps that's viable if looking up a single entity is not typical to your use case? > Which leads to my…
PSA for anyone considering reading it: this article is full of LLMisms and was probably generated from a prompt. That being said, I agree with the premise. Most of those cultural preservation issues wouldn't be a…
Assuming ordering isn't a concern, can't you just have a field called "removed" and skip those when iterating? Or swap it with the last monster, and keeping an index for the last monster alive.
> All of our releases thus far are source available, and will be open source 4 years from the release date. So, the current up-to date version is proprietary.
"Protected" is the wrong word. "Restricted" is much more honest regarding what Denovo does. Good riddance.
It does feel like a shift, and sometimes coordinated signaling. This post was at the top of this thread not long ago. Now it's all pro-age verification posts.
> it leans on an uncharitable coloring of everybody who sees problems with copyright as "anti-copyright" That's the charitable coloring. Owning concepts or ideas, and trying to police others' use of ideas you """own"""…
Always have been broken. Hopefully, future legislation will cater less to publishers and copyright trolls. I'm not optimistic though. While certain kinds of publishers are indeed becoming less powerful, sports-related…
> Prosecutors say they are now investigating whether X has broken the law across multiple areas. This step could come before a police raid. This looks like plain political pressure. No lives were saved, and no crime was…
> I can’t imagine holding a job where I had to do work that I expect will fail. Sounds absolutely depressing. What keeps you motivated? The paycheck. I had never expected work to NOT be depressing by definition, though.…
> that is an extremely fringe belief that basically no one in the USA supports Clearly is it not a belief that no one in the USA supports, as seem in the discourse against ICE and immigration contrl. > The debate is on…
> I assume most languages have a thing like that. You're not wrong, I assume. My problem is specifically with the remaining languages without anything like that. :')
Zod is by far the most ergonomic way to express those ideas in TypeScript these days. I miss it when writing code in other languages. The friction with the rest of the ecosystem is real, though. Most code out there…
Surveillance is worse than slop. Also seems like an disproportional use of resources compared to free formats and editors we already have today. This product is in bad taste, and I hope it doesn't succeed.
Should work fine if you can run Zoom through Firefox.
Has anyone managed to boot it on bare metal using an AM5 motherboard? I tried booting various Illumos distros through USB sticks on two different AM5 computers, and it got stuck very early on. I assume due to some…
Is it common for the toolkits written from scratch in Rust to have bindings for other languages? I still think the ideal solution for Desktop GUIs would be the Qt company developing first class Qt bindings for Node.js…
> without copyright, all of the profit made on creative works (of a perhaps smaller pie) would get be kept by distributors like Amazon or Netflix Assuming copyright gets dismantled is a good-faith way, Netflix/Amazon…
I've always wondered if JS engines could rewrite those array functions at compile time, like this: https://github.com/SomeRanDev/Haxe-MagicArrayTools Though, it probably wouldn't work if user code modified the Array…
> Sorry if my objection came across as overly antagonistic Apologies accepted, no worries. > while your experiences are unassailable as your experience, it may not be very representative of what's out there. Of course.…
https://codeberg.org/thi.ng/umbrella/src/branch/develop/pack... That's an interesting take at ECS, seems to do lots of optimizations under the hood too. I'm surprised to not have heard of those libraries until now.
>Agents used to be bad at this kind of stuff in my workplace as well, but newer models + agent-friendly documentation + AGENT.md begging agents to read the fucking docs before coding changed this landscape for us here.…
> Then you either really haven't tried very hard to notice them or have been in an academic environment with severe defects. Sure. (?) > Does college even work for future economic prospects, by the way? Where I live, a…
I guess you and the other poster just have different standards. I've personally never found Ray Tracing to be worth the performance impact. I have a 3090 and a 7900 XT at home, on different computers. When opening a new…
> You go to a university because you are deeply interested in understanding the subject that you study. I don't think I've met anyone who fits that description. The ones deeply interested in the subject would likely…
Depending on your access patterns, maybe you could have a hash table mapping entities ids to indexes in your SoA. Perhaps that's viable if looking up a single entity is not typical to your use case? > Which leads to my…
PSA for anyone considering reading it: this article is full of LLMisms and was probably generated from a prompt. That being said, I agree with the premise. Most of those cultural preservation issues wouldn't be a…
Assuming ordering isn't a concern, can't you just have a field called "removed" and skip those when iterating? Or swap it with the last monster, and keeping an index for the last monster alive.
> All of our releases thus far are source available, and will be open source 4 years from the release date. So, the current up-to date version is proprietary.
"Protected" is the wrong word. "Restricted" is much more honest regarding what Denovo does. Good riddance.
It does feel like a shift, and sometimes coordinated signaling. This post was at the top of this thread not long ago. Now it's all pro-age verification posts.
> it leans on an uncharitable coloring of everybody who sees problems with copyright as "anti-copyright" That's the charitable coloring. Owning concepts or ideas, and trying to police others' use of ideas you """own"""…
Always have been broken. Hopefully, future legislation will cater less to publishers and copyright trolls. I'm not optimistic though. While certain kinds of publishers are indeed becoming less powerful, sports-related…
> Prosecutors say they are now investigating whether X has broken the law across multiple areas. This step could come before a police raid. This looks like plain political pressure. No lives were saved, and no crime was…
> I can’t imagine holding a job where I had to do work that I expect will fail. Sounds absolutely depressing. What keeps you motivated? The paycheck. I had never expected work to NOT be depressing by definition, though.…
> that is an extremely fringe belief that basically no one in the USA supports Clearly is it not a belief that no one in the USA supports, as seem in the discourse against ICE and immigration contrl. > The debate is on…