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ruuda

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Building the deployment tool I wish I had

ruuda.nl
44 points·by ruuda·2 mesi fa·5 comments

Slowly, Then Suddenly: How Products Fail (2022)

every.to
3 points·by ruuda·2 mesi fa·2 comments

Backseat Software

blog.mikeswanson.com
4 points·by ruuda·6 mesi fa·0 comments

An oral history of Bank Python (2021)

calpaterson.com
2 points·by ruuda·8 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

ruuda
·17 giorni fa·discuss
https://www.metaculus.com/questions/40965/ gives it 71% probability.
ruuda
·21 giorni fa·discuss
Codeberg
ruuda
·21 giorni fa·discuss
It works fine if you don't enable javascript.
ruuda
·2 mesi fa·discuss
https://goomics.net/239
ruuda
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I find this article a useful framing for understanding what is happening to GitHub right now. The original is from 2022, but this 2023 repost includes a relevant preface.
ruuda
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The text reads like an LLM was involved in this.
ruuda
·3 mesi fa·discuss
https://github.com/doy/rbw is a Rust alternative to the Bitwarden CLI. Although the Rust ecosystem is moving in NPM's direction (very large and very deep dependency trees), you still need to trust far fewer authors in your dependency tree than what is common for Javascript.
ruuda
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Finally https://www.metaculus.com/questions/9558/50-of-users-access-... can resolve!
ruuda
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Property-based testing is nice, but making it coverage-driven is a game changer. It will explore code paths that naive random inputs will not trigger in a thousand years. In Rust this works very well with libFuzzer and the Arbitrary crate to derive the generators.
ruuda
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I contacted the EU DMA team about my concerns and got a real reply within 24 hours. Not just an automated message, it looked like a real human read my message and wrote a reply. I'd urge other EU citizens to do the same.
ruuda
·5 mesi fa·discuss
It's not complex, in the sense that the rules are simple, but simple rules can still lead to complicated emergent behavior that is difficult for humans to understand, even if each of the 153 steps that the typechecker took to arrive at the result were easy to understand individually.
ruuda
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I tried Zed for some time. Then it had a regression which broke it completely on my laptop. (Zed can't start any more, logging a PlatformNotSupported error even though earlier versions worked fine.) I carefully bisected it, and it turned out to be due to an intentional change in Blade. The issue was acknowledged, and confirmed by several other users. Then it got converted into a "discussion" because there was nothing actionable to do according to the devs. Then the discussion got closed because they are "directing all support questions to Discord going forward". Then Discord announced mandatory age verification.
ruuda
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Mastodon
ruuda
·5 mesi fa·discuss
We wrote https://github.com/chorusone/fastsync for fast ad-hoc transfers over multiple TCP streams.
ruuda
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Give https://rcl-lang.org/#intuitive-json-queries a try! It can fill a similar role, but the syntax is very similar to Python/TypeScript/Rust, so you don’t need an LLM to write the query for you.
ruuda
·6 mesi fa·discuss
RCL (https://github.com/ruuda/rcl) pretty-prints its output by default. Pipe to `rcl e` to pretty-print RCL (which has slightly lighter key-value syntax, good if you only want to inspect it), while `rcl je` produces json output.

It doesn’t align tables like FracturedJson, but it does format values on a single line where possible. The pretty printer is based on the classic A Prettier Printer by Philip Wadler; the algorithm is quite elegant. Any value will be formatted wide if it fits the target width, otherwise tall.
ruuda
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Everything I know about IPv6 comes from this one blog post: https://apenwarr.ca/log/20170810. It’s from 2017, when IPv6 adoption was 17% according to https://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html; today it’s close to 50%.
ruuda
·7 mesi fa·discuss
It's a Linux thing too. It bit me in particular when running a script in a container that defaulted to ascii rather than utf-8 locale.
ruuda
·7 mesi fa·discuss
> Python now uses UTF-8 as the default encoding, independent of the system’s environment.

Nice, not specifying the encoding is one of the most common issues I need to point out in code reviews.
ruuda
·7 mesi fa·discuss
There is a sweet spot for the bass. Lower is better for deep bass, but too low and it stops being a recognizable note, and consumer speakers can't reproduce it. This effect exists though I'm not sure if it is the cause of the pattern here.