Thanks for the nice article. The SQLite docs that explain this bug are emphatic about how utterly rare, even irreproducible it is. How, then, was it found, one wonders?
Thousands of cheeses, each of which is a unique experience. Heck, even the serving temperature completely alters the experience. Next: wines, charcuterie, ... Pity the fool who can't taste the difference between any of…
The compiler is being actively worked on by Adam and his team at Nectry, but unfortunately those developments are not currently being backported to the open source repo. I'm fairly confident this will happen eventually.…
One reason I love writing production code in Ur/Web is that LLMs are incapable of synthesising something even remotely resembling it. Keeps me on my toes. I think this is a great policy by the Zig team.
Whoa you were faster than me!
You just add `trace`. It's not hard. https://wiki.haskell.org/Debugging
I am a sucker for underdog software (anyone else using Ur/Web in prod?) and I was instantly infatuated when I first came across Fossil. I wasted a week of my life trying to fall in love with it but actually realising…
I think this point is crucial: > [...] would be roughly proportional to the strength of the friend network connecting them.
That is true! The system I mentioned above, which I had to refactor, was written in the worst Haskell that I've ever seen and nobody at the company dared touch it with a 10-foot pole.
You can't say... > Not sure if tools and technologies can solve accidental complexity. ... and then say > For me, consistent systematic naming and prefixes/suffixes to make names unique are a hint that a person is…
Getting AI vibes from this article? It is strangely repetitive and meandering. Also tell-tale "It's not X, it's Y" and sort of unspecific mostly. Also, why would you have billions of open transactions? That is the…
> That’s all great, but there are websites that still don’t have dark modes. Such as that very website? ;)
Very cool! Although this part feels a bit hand-wavy (or shall I say, AI-wand-wavy?) <quote> Machine learning decode: building on our previous work23, here we apply machine-learning-based decode (see section ‘Reading and…
+1. This is 100% hallucinated. Creds: My first programming language was GRAFIS CAD Fachsprache, a parametric pattern drafting software for garments, which incidentally powers our business (https:/liepelt.design—the…
Indeed they write that the algorithm has been implemented in DuckDB.
I wonder if this is being implemented for SQLite?
Erlang does exactly what the author wants.
> [I'm] the creator of Claude Code. but also > Claude Code works great out of the box, so I personally don't customize it much. Am I the only one to notice the irony of this juxtaposition?
Which one of these is most trustworthy in terms of 1. doesn't (and won't) munge personal data 2. will be available in 2035 ?
Now this makes me genuinely curious: is there a browser which respects privacy, that is usable?
Next sewing project: rock pants.
Of course hooligans steal shopping carts. This was about people leaving shopping carts in the parking lot :)
Whoa!
Here, US?
PS: This is not meant as snark, but rather an observation, that by means of a small nudge (in this case the coin deposit), people can learn to do the Right Thing. To quote Charlie Munger: > Show me the incentive and…
Thanks for the nice article. The SQLite docs that explain this bug are emphatic about how utterly rare, even irreproducible it is. How, then, was it found, one wonders?
Thousands of cheeses, each of which is a unique experience. Heck, even the serving temperature completely alters the experience. Next: wines, charcuterie, ... Pity the fool who can't taste the difference between any of…
The compiler is being actively worked on by Adam and his team at Nectry, but unfortunately those developments are not currently being backported to the open source repo. I'm fairly confident this will happen eventually.…
One reason I love writing production code in Ur/Web is that LLMs are incapable of synthesising something even remotely resembling it. Keeps me on my toes. I think this is a great policy by the Zig team.
Whoa you were faster than me!
You just add `trace`. It's not hard. https://wiki.haskell.org/Debugging
I am a sucker for underdog software (anyone else using Ur/Web in prod?) and I was instantly infatuated when I first came across Fossil. I wasted a week of my life trying to fall in love with it but actually realising…
I think this point is crucial: > [...] would be roughly proportional to the strength of the friend network connecting them.
That is true! The system I mentioned above, which I had to refactor, was written in the worst Haskell that I've ever seen and nobody at the company dared touch it with a 10-foot pole.
You can't say... > Not sure if tools and technologies can solve accidental complexity. ... and then say > For me, consistent systematic naming and prefixes/suffixes to make names unique are a hint that a person is…
Getting AI vibes from this article? It is strangely repetitive and meandering. Also tell-tale "It's not X, it's Y" and sort of unspecific mostly. Also, why would you have billions of open transactions? That is the…
> That’s all great, but there are websites that still don’t have dark modes. Such as that very website? ;)
Very cool! Although this part feels a bit hand-wavy (or shall I say, AI-wand-wavy?) <quote> Machine learning decode: building on our previous work23, here we apply machine-learning-based decode (see section ‘Reading and…
+1. This is 100% hallucinated. Creds: My first programming language was GRAFIS CAD Fachsprache, a parametric pattern drafting software for garments, which incidentally powers our business (https:/liepelt.design—the…
Indeed they write that the algorithm has been implemented in DuckDB.
I wonder if this is being implemented for SQLite?
Erlang does exactly what the author wants.
> [I'm] the creator of Claude Code. but also > Claude Code works great out of the box, so I personally don't customize it much. Am I the only one to notice the irony of this juxtaposition?
Which one of these is most trustworthy in terms of 1. doesn't (and won't) munge personal data 2. will be available in 2035 ?
Now this makes me genuinely curious: is there a browser which respects privacy, that is usable?
Next sewing project: rock pants.
Of course hooligans steal shopping carts. This was about people leaving shopping carts in the parking lot :)
Whoa!
Here, US?
PS: This is not meant as snark, but rather an observation, that by means of a small nudge (in this case the coin deposit), people can learn to do the Right Thing. To quote Charlie Munger: > Show me the incentive and…