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Doohickey-d

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Doohickey-d
·6 days ago·discuss
It's often more nuanced than that IMO.

OSM in my experience is better at features (roads, hiking trails, and stuff like that), i.e. what's shown in that comparison screenshot.

Google Maps is better at place-metadata, such as opening hours; as well as user-contributed content like reviews and photos.

So I end up using both, depending on usecase.
Doohickey-d
·7 days ago·discuss
And Organic Maps is itself a fork of Maps.me, started ...due to concern over the governance of Maps.me (introduction of commercial elements I think?).

This app has had quite a history.
Doohickey-d
·21 days ago·discuss
I even (quite a few years ago) successfully ran an older version of Minecraft on a laptop released in 2003. That had a Radeon 9000 graphics with a whole 32MB of VRAM.

And yes, it was playable with IIRC around 20fps, with minimum settings and a performance-tweaking mod (Optifine?). I played it a lot, since that laptop was all I had.

Even 0ad (the open source RTS game) was playable on that.

That was maybe in 2013 or something like that, so the machine was "only" 10 years old.
Doohickey-d
·23 days ago·discuss
Well, it could als also be argued that Chrome _is_ more secure, for example because it uses app-bound encryption using Windows DPAPI system, for cookies, so that it at least tries to protect cookies from malicious applications running on the device. Firefox does not do this: https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/279629/are-cook...

If course the reverse can also be argued, for example that Firefox supports proper adblocking.
Doohickey-d
·last month·discuss
The ones in Spain often market themselves with their Chinese-ness: "Hyper China", "Panda Bazaar", "Maxi Barato (super cheap)", etc. would be some representative names & signage you see outside.

They range in size from small shops to things with huge floor space.

One thing I've found is that they seem to sell very low quality stuff: e.g. on aliexpress you can buy a flashlight which is built out of metal, has usb-c charging, for $10, whereas in the physical shop, you get the plastic one that takes AA batteries for $2. So they're not a replacement for AliExpress, Temu & co.
Doohickey-d
·2 months ago·discuss
A question for OP: why did you choose Crunchy Data for your database, instead of Fly's own managed postgres offering? Because the latency between Fly and Crunchy Data must be quite high, given that they are probably not in the same datacenter.
Doohickey-d
·2 months ago·discuss
Im curious about this: because in my experience (working on smaller services though), a small number of errors is always there, as a "baseline".

Recently there was this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47252971 "10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflips"

Which makes me think a small amount of random issues which happen even though nothing is broken, is normal everywhere. Especially once move things around on a network, there's potential for a lot more random errors.
Doohickey-d
·2 months ago·discuss
Hm, interesting. But the pricing page is quite confusing to me: the $39 "pro plan" says "Up to 8 instances running". And above that, "Pricing that scales to zero". But if I'm always paying $39, what's the point of scaling to zero vs just keeping the 8 instances running? I guess the point is that you can scale down one workload and scale up another, but that seems a bit niche compared to the much more common use case of "scale up with increased user activity, and pay less when users are sleeping".

It's missing some sort of per-minute / per-GB RAM "pay as you go" pricing model. It seems like Fly.io, but missing the pay-as-you-go pricing & rapid scaling model that makes Fly worth using.
Doohickey-d
·2 months ago·discuss
On LAN (no internet, wired), it's quite decent. With e.g. Parsec, it's quite high image quality, low single digit latency, so quite usable.
Doohickey-d
·3 months ago·discuss
They specialize in domains management for businesses who consider their domain to be _very_ important. Think Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Wikipedia... (all of those are listed as clients on the wiki page)

As in "pay a lot of money", and we'll dedicate someone to your domain who makes sure that "giving a domain to a stranger without any documents" will _never_ happen.
Doohickey-d
·3 months ago·discuss
What are you doing for DB backups? Do you have a replica/standby? Or is it just hourly or something like that?

Because with a single-server setup like this, I'd imagine that hardware (e.g. SSD) failure brings down your app, and in the case of SSD failure, you then have hours or days downtime while you set everything up again.
Doohickey-d
·3 months ago·discuss
Changing project framerate is apparently quite a hard problem, even DaVinci Resolve when you change it, warns you that you cannot change it for that project again.

Probably internally everything in a project is referenced to specific frame numbers, which would break if you changed the project framerate.
Doohickey-d
·3 months ago·discuss
And I would rather have the _choice_ whether to prove my age to Apple or not. I think if it were optional, with the additional option of "share my age with websites & apps", nobody would have an issue with it.
Doohickey-d
·3 months ago·discuss
Looks like it's using leaflet + map tiles from https://carto.com/

I think Mapbox also provides a similar looking basemap style.
Doohickey-d
·4 months ago·discuss
There's even eSIMs specifically marketed as being a "backup" esim, with coverage on _all_ UK networks.

At least on my android, you could set the second esim as a "backup" that it would switch to for data if the main one lost connection (it took a few seconds, so it wasn't an "always connected" experience, probably because the phone wants to save power)

Lots of options if you search for "esim UK all networks".
Doohickey-d
·4 months ago·discuss
And that one is actually a direct, no-change trip on a single bus. 5 days of non-stop bus.

YouTuber Noel Philips also covered it, if you want to see it in that form.
Doohickey-d
·4 months ago·discuss
You can do this all in fly.io, no cloudflare container needed.

The whole selling point of fly is lightweight and fast VMs that can be "off" when not needed and start on-request. For this, I would:

Set up a "peformance" instance, with auto start on, and auto-restart-on-exit _off_, which runs a simple web service which accepts an incoming request, does the processing and upload, and then exits. All you need is the fly config, dockerfile, and service code (e.g. python). A simple api app like that which only serves to ffmpeg-process something, can start very fast (ms). Something which needs to load e.g. a bigger model such as whisper can also still work, but will be a bit slower. fly takes care of automatically starting stopped instances on an incoming request, for you.

(In my use case: app where people upload audio, to have it transcribed with whisper. I would send a ping from the frontend to the "whisper" service even before the file finished uploading, saying "hey wake up, there's audio coming soon", and it was started by the time the audio was actually available. Worked great.)
Doohickey-d
·5 months ago·discuss
For at least some codebases, I'm not sure this is a useful metric. Because you don't usually put the whole codebase in your context at the same time.

For example in my current case, there are lots of files with CSS, SVG icons in separate files, old database migration scripts, etc. Those don't go in the LLM context 99% of the time.

Maybe a more useful metric would be "what percentage of files that have been edited in the last {n} days fit in the context"?
Doohickey-d
·5 months ago·discuss
Another option for anonymous mobile service: https://silent.link/

eSIM, global, variable pricing per country with per-GB billing, anonymous crypto payments and no KYC. Although it seems to not have some of the additional security features of the OP.
Doohickey-d
·5 months ago·discuss
For another "clothing patterns as code" approach, see https://freesewing.dev/ - also with a more complete UI and editor.