Looking for help how to learn from your github where the raw data for building is located.
As an aspiring creator of similar things, I'd very much appreciate a road map from your view on how to best approach the github source... from a learners perspective.
So for example, if a break down was based on complexity, barrier of entry, activation energy of baseline starting... etc.
Hi. This is really cool. I tried your example, and it rendered top to bottom instead of left to right (as in the directions).
The very first example: x -> y
I rendered the svg, and then loaded ONLY the svg into a browser window.
I then looked through the whole of the document and tried to find how to align the output... and couldn't find out how.
Since the linked instructional was diverging from real life results, I stopped using it. :(
If you know how to fix it or could update the directions to ensure reliable output to the directions... that would go a long way for visitors like myself :)
does Komorebi handle the random teams/windows popups effectively?
meaning. the popup takes focus for my window manager hot keys and moves the little pop up across the screen when i want to move the window i am using accross the screen.
and generally, windows based 'windows' like outlook dont get captured by autohotkey key bindings.
didn't know any other way to reach out since the old thread had no 'reply' buttons. so i ended up here ;)
Many thanks. I took notice of your prometheus mention and had also seen that peppered in the docs for both services (openT and SigN) as a way to gather data.
As time investment is a dangerous thing I didn't plop myself down for some R&D... But... thanks to your post I'll have another go at it and determine how to get it to hum.
Hi, I want to love this product. This will be the 3rd or 4th time I have looked at the docs to figure out basic setup.
Each time I look into this. I look to see how it can report CPU/Memory/Disk of the systems at large. When I read, all I find on open telemetry and SigNoz is how to integrate with application stacks.
Am I missing something fundamental in that SygNoz/OpenTelemetry do not integrate with host level metrics? I really, really want to use this product. But this extremely BASIC implementation to use the service is 100% missing for documentation as far as I can tell. Even the example page has nothing listed https://signoz.io/docs/tutorials/ ...
So I am either trying to find out how to make SygNoz do something it was not built to do... or the documentation has a huge hole in it.
Let me know how to proceed, if you have time. It's appreciated so that I dont keep walking down the wrong road and hoping to find something useful.
Your post missed the entire point of the frustration and arbitrates it away through an explanation that obfuscates clarity ad nauseum.
See what i did there. one sentence.
THE ISSUE PRESENTED IN THE POST: I want to use the product. I have to inconvenience my routine to use it.
This issue is pervasive in tech. It ASSUMES the idiot. Big Tech is defining what is best for the user. This is what we have bought. This post is pointing that out. From what I can tell, the Parent post here is a shill or is the typical 'doesn't happen to me tech elitist'.
That's about it. Found my login to make this comment. Logging out.
This is really interesting. I wish they would have gone the other way after. Taken the bacteria from the middle and observed how long it took to lose that anti-bacterial resistance.
I am convinced that bacterial resistance is a trait, but am unconvinced of it's permanence if the utility of maintaining it is removed from the environment.
Looking for help how to learn from your github where the raw data for building is located.
As an aspiring creator of similar things, I'd very much appreciate a road map from your view on how to best approach the github source... from a learners perspective.
So for example, if a break down was based on complexity, barrier of entry, activation energy of baseline starting... etc.
the key areas I see are:
- hardware design
- hardware ordering
- software design and interface with hardware
- materials selection - chips - case/3dprint/scaffolding
- time constraints to keep in mind for the above so as not to 'overload the novice'
So ... Thanks for the post and the clear historical reference frame. If you end up answering this post, it will only add to the appreciation!
:D