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suranyami

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投稿

Migrating My Homelab from Swarmpit to Uncloud

suranyami.com
3 ポイント·投稿者 suranyami·6 か月前·1 コメント

コメント

suranyami
·6 か月前·議論
A recent upgrade to Dietpi (Debian Trixie) totally broke `docker` operations in Swarmpit. Swarmpit is essentially abandoned, so I used it as an opportunity to migrate to Uncloud. It's been totally awesome.
suranyami
·7 か月前·議論
On MacOS:

Option-Shift-Hyphen for em-dash

Option-Hyphen for en-dash

Shift-Hyphen for underscore
suranyami
·7 か月前·議論
Just to add my own observation here: some cuisines are really optimized for sharing in larger groups… certainly a lot of the regional Chinese cuisines assume many people at a table, with large (i.e. higher priced) servings. If it’s just 2 or 3 of you, you end up getting only 1 or 2 dishes, often with a lot left over.

So, this is a genius way of optimizing for that!

I totally want something like this here in Sydney.
suranyami
·昨年·議論
I dunno whether "good" really applies to this, but I've gotta say I've been loving the cost, portability and reliability of the Numark DJ2Go Touch ($AU120):

https://www.numark.com/product/dj2go2-touch

I've got a cute little portable setup using it, a Raspberry Pi 5 with a 1TB m.2 SSD, 15" portable USB-C monitor and a Keychron low-profile keyboard and bluetooth mouse. Works amazingly well.

I'm betting that just about any controller would be worth a shot.
suranyami
·2 年前·議論
Not a course, as such, but reading “Measurement” by Paul Lockhart, of “A Mathematician’s Lament fame.

I’ve never read anything that so clearly communicates and leads you into a state of mind that COMPELS you to prove mathematical conjectures from first principles.

I found myself furiously sketching geometric proofs and simplifying algebraic conundrums with an enthusiasm I haven’t experienced in decades.

And a course on sewing for beginners and continuing Japanese.
suranyami
·2 年前·議論
“Measurement” by Paul Lockhart, of “A Mathematician’s Lament” fame.

This was recommended by the delightful and talented Tibees YouTuber.

A few pages in and I was absolutely hooked and ready to start proving geometric conjectures…

A truly amazing communicator and educator.
suranyami
·2 年前·議論
Interesting stuff.

Would be VERY interested in having visualizations of Apple Music data. I've had 20+ years to build up pretty significant play history.

Certainly being able to look into every type of health data would yield interesting insights.

One minor thing that does bug me: US date format. Probably be better to default to whatever short-date format is the user's preference in iOS. Same goes for metric/imperial.

Looking forward to seeing more visualizations!
suranyami
·2 年前·議論
This is gonna sound a bit corny, but it impacted me for reasons that will become clear: "1984", by George Orwell.

I was 13 at the time, and I was lucky enough to have a passionate English teacher that gave us challenging books to review. I chose "1984". It was the first book I'd read, up to that point, that didn't have a "Hollywood ending". The hero didn't save the day and get the girl… just the victory of tyranny over individualism. Admittedly, I had read a lot of crap, up till then.

As the leader directly tells Winston (i.e. you, the reader): "If you want a picture of the future, think of a boot stamping on a human face - forever."

I was gripped by the writing up till the very last words, then a panic set in… I thought that there were pages missing… I literally checked that someone hadn't torn out the last chapter where everything is made right again. No. There was no liberation. I sat stunned for the better part of an hour.

"The Dispossessed" by Ursula le Guin: never have I experienced the idea of a working anarchism described in such a genuinely coherent form.
suranyami
·2 年前·議論
This is remarkably similar to Calca.app, which I still use occasionally. http://calca.io/

I love that yours is web based! Can see it being much more reusable in a number of use-cases.

Calca was originally MacOS/iOS, but has since been ported to Windows.

I think that the notation in Calca to use a `=>` to display results maybe adds a bit more clarity to the math expressions, but your display style seems to work pretty well too.

The only advantage Calca seems to have is they’ve had almost a decade to add things like extra functions (compound interest, trig, …), constants, operators, etc.

I’ve always thought that style of simple but highly visible calculation is a far superior alternative to spreadsheets. Jupyter, LiveBook, Mathematica, etc… have shown that it works, but the world is still enamored with Excel, despite its propensity to hide mistakes.