It's a great idea and something I would absolutely use. However I can't get it to draw anything at all. I just get one single box or some messy rubbish
This is such a wonderful template for people who struggle with interacting with strangers.
A combination of growing up in a very isolated place, and being introverted resulted in me struggling to talk to strangers for my whole life.
I think the real takeaway here, for socially anxious folks, is that like every other skill, it sucks to start but if you do the reps you get better! In the last few years IVE gotten miles better at talking to strangers, mostly thanks to travelling and just forcing myslef to practice.
The thing I try to remember is: "Almost everyone is actually just like me. If a nice stranger asked me some genuine questions I'd love to chat".
The challenge for me was just not knowing what to ask.
Some of my favorite questions:
During transit/hostels: "Where were you going?", and then "why did you go there?", "what are your plans while you're here", "what was your favourite thing you did?", "Where is your home?", ask for recommendations of things to do in their town, country, the place they just visited.
These have let me meet locals, be given tours of the city, have great restaurant recommendations and heaps of great conversations.
At bars/ in line for the toilet etc:
I basically always just default to "Do you live here, or are you travelling?" You can then use the questions above.
People love if they've been to your country or a place you've been and you can ask them specific stuff about their trip. Good chance nobody they know ever asked any decent questions because they hadn't also been to that place.
Once you get someone talking it's a whole other skill to deepen the relationship, but I'm still working on that one
I'm a staunch believer that watches should be small enough to never annoy, always show the time, and never have to be charged but I think this finally does all those things well enough that it's a legitimate option.
What is that warranty though? 30 days is pretty rough for a new and untested product. It's definitely enough to make me hold off for a year just in case.
I would love to see some benchmarks of unison somewhere on their website. I find knowing there performance characteristics helps a lot with understanding the use cases for a new language.
Even just a really rough "here our requests per second compared to Django, express.js and asp.net"
Would be great to get a rough read on where it sits among other choices for web stuff.
More generally, I do hope this goes well for unison, the ideas being explored are certainly fascinating.
I just hope it one day gets a runtime/target that's more applicable to non web stuff. I find it much easier to justify using a weird language for a little CLI tool then for a large web project.
In years of using eBay, have never had an issue with it. Sad that that's a high praise these days, but it is. eBay is fast, it works damn well, and always has.
As a counter point, React's poster children, in messenger, Facebook and Instagram. Have all been plagued with UI bugs for the entire time I've used them.
Obviously those aren't wholly comparable, but I do think it's worth taking note of the actual outcomes we have when tools are used at real scale.