If you ever need to generate a gradient between colors in any of your code, interpolating colors in the Lab color space is an awesome option. A simple linear interpolation of the components gives impressively beautiful results.
(Although, like several other commenters, I do recommend OKLab.)
I wonder why the parent comment is downvoted. To a layman like me, it sounds completely reasonable.
Maintaining an exact copy of RNA/DNA through generations and generations is a real challenge, right? Loosening up the copying mechanisms to allow for more mistakes would probably be quite easy to achieve, if that was beneficial, right?
I’d be interested to hear what makes the idea wrong.
It covers all my basic living costs. But I kind of got bored (again) of being happily unemployed (for the second time), and started a small consulting business on the side. A four-day workweek in addition to the Radio Silence stuff keeps me quite content.
I think this is not related at all to the linked article.
If you have a story about this, could you post it as a separate link and see how it does on its own? Trying to hijack other threads with politically loaded stuff usually goes sour here.
Not exactly related to NeoPG, but GPGME in general: Doesn't GPGME assume that the user already has GnuPG 2.x installed and running on their system?
This might just be a misconception I have, but I always thought you couldn't make a batteries-included, self-contained, works-out-of-the-box app if you used GPGME. You'd first have to tell the user to go get a GnuPG implementation from somewhere.
Little Snitch was actually the inspiration to build Radio Silence, but in a what-not-to-do kind of way.
I had just bought my first Mac, and was really impressed with how easy everything was. It really was a joy to use. Little Snitch instantly turned it into an obnoxious, interrupting mess where almost every app was broken by default.
I'm sure Little Snitch is the right app for many people, but not for me. I basically learned Objective-C just to build an alternative for myself. That turned into Radio Silence.
I was happily unemployed for a while, living off the app income for about 15 months.
However, I just joined an AI startup two months ago, not out of necessity, but because I found their idea super interesting and had the chance. (Also, the marginal value for a day off wasn't that high anymore.)
I was really afraid that Apple’s new policy on making kernel extensions harder to install would cut into the profits, but sales have actually gone up since. Perhaps other firewalls are even harder to get up and running.