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TimByte

463 karmajoined anno scorso

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Came across the async framework userver 3.0 recently – they've moved to C++20

github.com
2 points·by TimByte·mese scorso·0 comments

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TimByte
·5 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·5 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·5 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·8 giorni fa·discuss
The web has its own problems, but at least bad HTML is often still visible enough to repair. A custom canvas-like desktop UI can be basically a black box to assistive tech
TimByte
·8 giorni fa·discuss
Yeah, blind seems unavoidable there, since it's literally about a blind client
TimByte
·8 giorni fa·discuss
The "invisible" point is interesting, although I'm not sure I'd read too much into it. Visual metaphors are so baked into English that avoiding all of them can start to feel a bit performative unless the wording is actually excluding someone
TimByte
·8 giorni fa·discuss
Sidewalks have to be usable by people who can't hear, people moving slowly, kids, older people etc. If a cyclist is on a sidewalk and can't safely pass without the pedestrian reacting instantly, they're the one creating the problem
TimByte
·8 giorni fa·discuss
The "read only" example is such a good illustration of how accessibility problems often aren't one big broken thing, but a bunch of tiny reasonable-seeming decisions stacked together
TimByte
·9 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·9 giorni fa·discuss
The most interesting number is missing here, and that is the token distribution by use case. If 60-70% was eaten up by PDFs, agents and automation instead of people actually sitting in Claude Code, then it is a completely different story
TimByte
·13 giorni fa·discuss
Maybe the real lesson is that public education has always had both impulses: emancipation and formation on one hand, conformity and state needs on the other
TimByte
·13 giorni fa·discuss
I think both can be true, depending on which layer of the system you're looking at
TimByte
·13 giorni fa·discuss
That may be why the rhetoric of education stays lofty while the day-to-day machinery often feels much more pragmatic
TimByte
·13 giorni fa·discuss
Mandatory education is still probably better than the alternative but it does seem to create a constant tension: the system has to serve students who want very different things from it
TimByte
·13 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·17 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·17 giorni fa·discuss
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TimByte
·17 giorni fa·discuss
The funniest part is that the article about AI slime polluting the internet was itself generated from start to finish by a neural net to promote some startup.

But the problem they're so clumsily trying to monetize is absolutely real. GitHub is rapidly turning from a place with battle-tested solutions into a dumpster fire of hallucinations. And no crutches like MAREF are gonna fix that because platforms profit from showing growth in repo and commit counts even if it's all dead plastic code.
TimByte
·21 giorni fa·discuss
This is a good reminder that "green" does not have to mean perfectly manicured
TimByte
·21 giorni fa·discuss
I don't think the point is that London literally lacks pavement trees. As you say, the London plane is almost part of the city's visual identity in many areas. The interesting thing to me is how uneven the experience can be