Open source it, you pussies
> Bloated file sizes due to javascript libraries for lazy loading data. Use of JS, including the NPM-backed bloat you see in libraries used on the modern web, is orthogonal to whether a site is on a static host or…
> There's plenty of people who occasionally need to create barcodes > hopefully that [1MB] will be served from a cache
Aside from obfuscating the source code to sell licenses, how does this benefit from WASM? Barcodes have been generated for decades on low-resource embedded devices. Even what would have been a modest-to-low-end machine…
> I use change detection to monitor all sorts of websites for changes. Some of my favorite authors don't have RSS. Have you considered offering, as penitence, a public feed to share the information that this process…
> it no longer works in every app because services insist on writing their own players that don't work as well as the player provided by Apple TV So much for those oft-touted benefits of Apple's policy on gatekeeping…
> it just is an overlay for pirate streaming sites Not "just". You left out its role as a bot network exit node.
For server implementations that aren't braindead, that is indeed the important bit. Computers don't inherently know how to run PHP. If the request handler doesn't look at the file extension to decide whether or not to…
[flagged]
> I find that most datepickers are better than the browser's You mean your browser's. There is no "the browser".
> the code itself makes it harder for people to contribute, especially those, like me, who don't use coding agents. > Where are the interface boundaries? Why are there methods that are 200 lines long? LLM-backed code…
DHH, of course.
> it feels like this is much more a UX/social problem It's not merely "like" that. That's what it is. "Wiki" comes from the Hawaiian work for "quick". You spot an error, you click the button to change it, and the change…
If the contributor instructions for your wiki requires: 1. forking the repo 2. committing the changes 3. submitting a pull request ... then you don't have a wiki.
I've gotten those taps on the shoulder. Every time I went for it, I ended up thinking, "Geez. What was I expecting to be good about this? This experience is awful."
> This wouldn't be an issue if patches were XML or JSON Or MIME, even.
"Trivial" doesn't exclusively mean "easy", though it is often used as a euphemism like that. In a literal sense, it very well may have been trivial, even if neither you nor the professor would have been able to easily…
Subjectively, it seems like it's even prudent to consider that someone who is involved in a discussion about whether or not they're suicidal is probably likelier than average to commit suicide. Fair chance that "I'm not…
[dead]
Mozilla also isn't exactly strapped for cash. They pull in around half a billion dollars per year (to accomplish what could be done on a budget a tenth that size).
There are very good reasons why you 501(c)(3) doesn't allow setting up a non-profit that accept "donations" that benefit one of the non-profit's wholly owned for-profit subsidiaries.
You probably could have just dropped a line at the end saying that all of the links in the post so readers are advised 2 plz click so you can get credit.
Bunny.net purports to have a pay-as-you-go prepaid credit system that sounds like it works the way people want, and with their description of the way it works probably being sufficient to be legally enforceable if it…
Google Maps is not Firebase. And "Firebase AI Logic" sure sounds like something easy to confuse with a Firebase service...
There's a brand-new, Gemini-specific feature for that (as new as March 23), but historically the answer has tended to be "no" from all the cloud providers. Most giants and indies alike have always been strongly opposed…
Open source it, you pussies
> Bloated file sizes due to javascript libraries for lazy loading data. Use of JS, including the NPM-backed bloat you see in libraries used on the modern web, is orthogonal to whether a site is on a static host or…
> There's plenty of people who occasionally need to create barcodes > hopefully that [1MB] will be served from a cache
Aside from obfuscating the source code to sell licenses, how does this benefit from WASM? Barcodes have been generated for decades on low-resource embedded devices. Even what would have been a modest-to-low-end machine…
> I use change detection to monitor all sorts of websites for changes. Some of my favorite authors don't have RSS. Have you considered offering, as penitence, a public feed to share the information that this process…
> it no longer works in every app because services insist on writing their own players that don't work as well as the player provided by Apple TV So much for those oft-touted benefits of Apple's policy on gatekeeping…
> it just is an overlay for pirate streaming sites Not "just". You left out its role as a bot network exit node.
For server implementations that aren't braindead, that is indeed the important bit. Computers don't inherently know how to run PHP. If the request handler doesn't look at the file extension to decide whether or not to…
[flagged]
> I find that most datepickers are better than the browser's You mean your browser's. There is no "the browser".
> the code itself makes it harder for people to contribute, especially those, like me, who don't use coding agents. > Where are the interface boundaries? Why are there methods that are 200 lines long? LLM-backed code…
DHH, of course.
> it feels like this is much more a UX/social problem It's not merely "like" that. That's what it is. "Wiki" comes from the Hawaiian work for "quick". You spot an error, you click the button to change it, and the change…
If the contributor instructions for your wiki requires: 1. forking the repo 2. committing the changes 3. submitting a pull request ... then you don't have a wiki.
I've gotten those taps on the shoulder. Every time I went for it, I ended up thinking, "Geez. What was I expecting to be good about this? This experience is awful."
> This wouldn't be an issue if patches were XML or JSON Or MIME, even.
"Trivial" doesn't exclusively mean "easy", though it is often used as a euphemism like that. In a literal sense, it very well may have been trivial, even if neither you nor the professor would have been able to easily…
Subjectively, it seems like it's even prudent to consider that someone who is involved in a discussion about whether or not they're suicidal is probably likelier than average to commit suicide. Fair chance that "I'm not…
[dead]
Mozilla also isn't exactly strapped for cash. They pull in around half a billion dollars per year (to accomplish what could be done on a budget a tenth that size).
There are very good reasons why you 501(c)(3) doesn't allow setting up a non-profit that accept "donations" that benefit one of the non-profit's wholly owned for-profit subsidiaries.
You probably could have just dropped a line at the end saying that all of the links in the post so readers are advised 2 plz click so you can get credit.
Bunny.net purports to have a pay-as-you-go prepaid credit system that sounds like it works the way people want, and with their description of the way it works probably being sufficient to be legally enforceable if it…
Google Maps is not Firebase. And "Firebase AI Logic" sure sounds like something easy to confuse with a Firebase service...
There's a brand-new, Gemini-specific feature for that (as new as March 23), but historically the answer has tended to be "no" from all the cloud providers. Most giants and indies alike have always been strongly opposed…