Would be kind of interesting to build a “live” visualization of objects in earths orbit. But this would require accurate live data of those objects. Probably nothing that companies would publish.
On the other hand side: once the object and its orbit is identified, positions could be calculated…
> Superhuman valued at $825 million in 2021, $35 million annual revenue
This is nuts! I used Superhuman for about a year. And honestly, I might still be using it if the pricing weren't so off. It had a couple of nice features, and the keyboard-driven approach was a welcome change for mail clients.
But ultimately, Superhuman had nothing that couldn't be replicated in a relatively short amount of time (maybe even with plugins?).
$825 million? Maybe I should start a mail client company...
I went to the comments to see if I was the only one who felt this way. I don't judge using AI to correct spelling or style issues, but this is just too much.
> In general everything about it feels like it makes projects easy to work on for 5 days, abandon for 2 years, and then get back into writing code without a lot of problems.
To me this is one of the most underrated qualities of go code.
Go is a language that I started learning years ago, but did't change dramatically. So my knowledge is still useful, even almost ten years later.
My personal blog writing mainly about technical things such as Kubernetes (and Containers), WebAssembly or Zig. Lately I’m documenting my progress of learning the Rust programming language by taking notes on specific topics.
First: wasm is the perfect plug-in language, as it provides a high level of isolation and therefore security for the host app.
Second: the promise of wasm is that you can write it in any language. I think this is compelling for any application that seeks for extensibility.
Wether all this is worth the effort is probably the actual question. Maybe we will be surprised by killer plugins that wouldn’t be possible with regular plug-in systems…
Would be kind of interesting to build a “live” visualization of objects in earths orbit. But this would require accurate live data of those objects. Probably nothing that companies would publish.
On the other hand side: once the object and its orbit is identified, positions could be calculated…
Does anyone know more?