Things are happening in that space already!
I work at Actyx and we have a production ready stack for local-first real serverless (peer-to-peer) applications. Please take a look at https://actyx.com/ .
Factory software is at the core of value creation, it is crucial to our society. Creating factory software is exceedingly difficult. Actyx is solving this problem. Our platform ActyxOS—based on a peer-to-peer architecture with no central nor on-site servers—allows developers to easily build and run powerful data-driven applications. This helps factories answer questions, reduce waste, and increase performance. Over the last 2.5 years Actyx has grown to a team of 25 absolutely outstanding people, raised over 4 million EUR and was installed in multiple factories.
To help fuel growth of ActyxOS we are looking to hire for multiple open positions in the following roles to join the 8-strong Pan-European distributed development team:
We seek an outstanding candidate, who is highly driven, smart, confident, and gritty. Our perfect match is hungry to learn and enjoys working in fast-paced environments.
We are looking for candidates located within +/- 1 hour from CET/CEST (Berlin) time zone.
Factory software is at the core of value creation, it is crucial to our society. Creating factory software is exceedingly difficult. Actyx is solving this problem. Our platform ActyxOS—based on a peer-to-peer architecture with no central nor on-site servers—allows developers to easily build and run powerful data-driven applications. This helps factories answer questions, reduce waste, and increase performance. Over the last 2.5 years Actyx has grown to a team of 25 absolutely outstanding people, raised over 4 million EUR and was installed in multiple factories.
To help fuel growth of ActyxOS we are looking to hire for multiple open positions in the following roles to join the 8-strong Pan-European distributed development team:
We seek an outstanding candidate, who is highly driven, smart, confident, and gritty. Our perfect match is hungry to learn and enjoys working in fast-paced environments.
We are looking for candidates located within +/- 1 hour from CET/CEST (Berlin) time zone.
Factory software is at the core of value creation, it is crucial to our society. Creating factory software is exceedingly difficult. Actyx is solving this problem. Our platform ActyxOS—based on a peer-to-peer architecture with no central nor on-site servers—allows developers to easily build and run powerful data-driven applications. This helps factories answer questions, reduce waste, and increase performance. Over the last 2.5 years Actyx has grown to a team of 25 absolutely outstanding people, raised over 4 million EUR and was installed in multiple factories.
To help fuel growth of ActyxOS we are looking to hire for multiple open positions in the following roles to join the 8-strong Pan-European distributed development team:
We seek an outstanding candidate, who is highly driven, smart, confident, and gritty. Our perfect match is hungry to learn and enjoys working in fast-paced environments.
We are looking for candidates located within +/- 1 hour from CET/CEST (Berlin) time zone.
What about Intellicad (https://www.intellicad.org/ )? It seems to be pretty popular among engineers. It reads DWG/DXF (AutoCad format) pretty well.
The software itself goes by various names, because Intellicad itself is a consortium. For a nominal fee, you get access to the codebase and can release your own version with your own brand. The thing is shared source, so as a consortium member you need to contribute your changes to the core back to the shared codebase. However this is closed-source.
Edited.
There is Introduction to Functional Programming using Haskell by one of the authors if you'd rather have examples in a particular programming language.
Nice thing about "continuous" math is that we have so many "standardised" tools in its toolbox, contrasted with "ad-hoc-edness" of discrete math. Hence interesting is solving discrete problems with "continuous" tools - like e.g. http://ac.cs.princeton.edu/home/
This is reversed now, German Riesling much cheaper than Bordeaux.