Yep, that's the whole point. Pix transactions are designed to be instantly settled, even across different banks. The central government bank enforces this, as well as other rules (e.g. Pix between two individuals can't…
AFAIK, the difference between AGPL is GPL is on what constitutes "distribution"; what constitutes a "derivative" is still the same. https://drewdevault.com/2020/07/27/Anti-AGPL-propaganda.html
You might want to try out self hosting hydra! It's pretty sweet for your usecase (building and caching Nix stuff, in a smart way). It can even run arbitrary commands (e.g. moving a release branch) EDIT: here's how I do…
Your comment was very interesting to read! I wanted to chime in and mention that "Life is Strange" has a lot of this "what choice did you make?" book club-like feel to it, it's pretty fun to talk about!
That's pretty sweet! Is the code open source? I'd love to see how it works.
Yup! Worked great for the few months I used it. I think it's kinda funny how much simpler the Nix package is when compared to upstream's dockerfiles lol
Yes you can lol. I'm literally using WayVNC right now to work on my laptop from my desktop seamlessly
I'd definitively recommend it, though! I think the frameworks are pretty nice, do keep in mind they are all more like microframeworks (think flask, not django). If you like writing Rust code and building your own…
Yeah the only painpoint I have is that it's awkward to use async inside closures, otherwise, things are pretty smooth IMO.
I've worked on the server side with Axum and Rocket; both are pretty nice. I love SQLX to write queries that validate at build time, and had quite a blast using Maud to write HTML within Rust code. I'd say the type…
Honest question: what is it that you dislike in async rust? I personally find it is pretty straightforward
I have a mix of x86_64 and aarch64 machines and, damn, NixOS makes it so freaking easy. Most of nixpkgs works on both architectures. You can even use your machines as remote builders and/or use binfmt to transparently…
Yeah! There's specializations[1] to make this even simpler. [1] https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Specialisation
Grep nixpkgs for `buildNpmPackage`, it's ridiculously easy to package a node app nowadays.
The server's timezone is not even relevant. By using timestamptz, you include the timezone together with the timestamp, meaning you can be absolutely sure that the time stored is indeed UTC! You avoid the mistake of…
I mean, at least for me it hasn't been a problem. I currently self host mail on a VPS and everything's awesome. YMMV
Most hosted mail services have no issues getting to mailbox. I've used Gandi, Mailbox, FastMail, and never have any mails flagged as spam. Deliverability is only an issue when self hosting (particularly for home IPs)
Yep, that's the whole point. Pix transactions are designed to be instantly settled, even across different banks. The central government bank enforces this, as well as other rules (e.g. Pix between two individuals can't…
AFAIK, the difference between AGPL is GPL is on what constitutes "distribution"; what constitutes a "derivative" is still the same. https://drewdevault.com/2020/07/27/Anti-AGPL-propaganda.html
You might want to try out self hosting hydra! It's pretty sweet for your usecase (building and caching Nix stuff, in a smart way). It can even run arbitrary commands (e.g. moving a release branch) EDIT: here's how I do…
Your comment was very interesting to read! I wanted to chime in and mention that "Life is Strange" has a lot of this "what choice did you make?" book club-like feel to it, it's pretty fun to talk about!
That's pretty sweet! Is the code open source? I'd love to see how it works.
Yup! Worked great for the few months I used it. I think it's kinda funny how much simpler the Nix package is when compared to upstream's dockerfiles lol
Yes you can lol. I'm literally using WayVNC right now to work on my laptop from my desktop seamlessly
I'd definitively recommend it, though! I think the frameworks are pretty nice, do keep in mind they are all more like microframeworks (think flask, not django). If you like writing Rust code and building your own…
Yeah the only painpoint I have is that it's awkward to use async inside closures, otherwise, things are pretty smooth IMO.
I've worked on the server side with Axum and Rocket; both are pretty nice. I love SQLX to write queries that validate at build time, and had quite a blast using Maud to write HTML within Rust code. I'd say the type…
Honest question: what is it that you dislike in async rust? I personally find it is pretty straightforward
I have a mix of x86_64 and aarch64 machines and, damn, NixOS makes it so freaking easy. Most of nixpkgs works on both architectures. You can even use your machines as remote builders and/or use binfmt to transparently…
Yeah! There's specializations[1] to make this even simpler. [1] https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Specialisation
Grep nixpkgs for `buildNpmPackage`, it's ridiculously easy to package a node app nowadays.
The server's timezone is not even relevant. By using timestamptz, you include the timezone together with the timestamp, meaning you can be absolutely sure that the time stored is indeed UTC! You avoid the mistake of…
I mean, at least for me it hasn't been a problem. I currently self host mail on a VPS and everything's awesome. YMMV
Most hosted mail services have no issues getting to mailbox. I've used Gandi, Mailbox, FastMail, and never have any mails flagged as spam. Deliverability is only an issue when self hosting (particularly for home IPs)