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timka

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A super-private Web3 network

elibria.io
1 points·by timka·3 года назад·0 comments

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timka
·20 дней назад·discuss
BTW, calling that an epic novel is a stretch. Actually great Russian writers like Gogol (surprisingly, Dead Souls is a poem, in prose) and Pushkin (Captain's Daughter is neither novella or novel) had difficulties fitting into Western genres of fiction. I'm sure there are more examples.
timka
·20 дней назад·discuss
Yeah, Dick for Richard is my favorite!
timka
·3 месяца назад·discuss
A good read on the subject https://jyn.dev/the-terminal-of-the-future
timka
·3 месяца назад·discuss
There's still no such standard. You either provide a terminal API or build a custom client-server app (GUI + backend). The later means there's no place in your setup for terminal apps which expect a TTY interface (emulated by your terminal app). What are you gonna do about that?

Take a look at headless project management in Zed or JetBrains. They do exactly that -- bring clear separation of concerns in a high-level API so that you don't have to mux/demux everything into/from byte stream like terminal applications do.
timka
·9 месяцев назад·discuss
Surgery is when you're making a change live on a running system. Before that the source is more like a blueprint.
timka
·9 месяцев назад·discuss
While reading the Fundamentals of Data-Engineering I noticed that one of the most practically interesting parts, data extraction/acquisition, is essentially skipped. The author just noted its 'grayness'.

That is web scraping is the SaaS form of 'piracy'.
timka
·9 месяцев назад·discuss
It's the Westphalian system which includes not only (protestant) capitalism, but also scientific positivism, liberal humanism and everything else. Which we now call (post-/meta-)modern.

There's nothing we can do about all that and for practical reasons we just accept the world as is and tend to forget/ignore the reasons it is so. But for retaining cognitive sovereignty if think it's good to remember that.
timka
·9 месяцев назад·discuss
Lawrence J. Dickson anticipated this almost 2 decades ago in a research he did for DARPA in 2007[1]. Just look at the software development viscosity graph.

[1] http://pros.to/wide.pdf#figure.caption.11
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
I always thought the best automation is delegating to a specially trained person :) Still true, apparently.
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
Looks like a last-ditch effort to salvage its crumbling technological sovereignty amid the EU's systemic crisis. Even if they invent something, production will happen in China or the US.

Germany wants to preserve Airbus and stay relevant in European space programs, but without cheap energy and raw materials this is a pipe dream. Quantum computing/hydrogen is theoretically promising, but they're already behind China and the US. Trying to catch up to Russia in drones and EW, but without energy independence or microelectronics it won't work.

Without Russian gas or nuclear power, high-tech manufacturing is unprofitable. Germany's best engineers are already in Shanghai and Silicon Valley. Russia/China/the US are sprinting ahead in hypersonics, AI, and 6G, while Germany is just forming a ministry.

Germany's move isn't a breakthrough, it's desperation. They're trying to save face, but they lack energy for advanced tech w/o Russia, have no military shield w/o the US, can’t manufacture at scale w/o China.
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
Trying to make economic sense of a political action makes no sense. Trumps's goal is to disrupt global trade.
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
Britain was never rich in natural resources (coal was an exception, but its importance faded). Its strength always lay in:

    * Naval and trade dominance (a legacy of Venetian methods, transferred through the Netherlands).
    * Financial systems (London as the hub of insurance, lending, and later offshore banking).
    * Intelligence networks and manipulation (from the East India Company to MI6).
    * Colonial exploitation (enclosures, the Opium Wars, the Bengal famine of 1943, suppression of the Sepoy Rebellion, the exploitation of Ireland, etc.).
This wasn’t "honest" wealth but the result of systemic plunder and control over global flows. And the British elite has never prioritized the well-being of its people:

    * Enclosures (16th–18th centuries) – Peasants driven off the land for landlord profits.
    * The Irish Famine (1845–1849) – Grain was exported to England while millions starved.
    * "Divide and rule" policies – From India to Northern Ireland, preventing unity among the oppressed.
    * Austerity – Post-2008 budget cuts
Some may say this is in "distant path" but I think this is the root cause while the author focuses just on modern symptoms. The current crisis is the inevitable result of a model where wealth was built not on labor and innovation, but on exploitation and manipulation.
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
And another one:

The Russia-Ukraine War makes it clear that the electromagnetic signature emitted from the command posts of the past 20 years cannot survive against the pace and precision of an adversary who possesses sensor-based technologies, electronic warfare, and unmanned aerial systems or has access to satellite imagery; this includes nearly every state or nonstate actor the United States might find itself fighting in the near future. The Army must focus on developing command-and-control systems and mobile command posts that enable continuous movement, allow distributed collaboration, and synchronize across all warfighting functions to minimize electronic signature. Ukrainian battalion command posts reportedly consist of seven soldiers who dig in and jump twice daily; while that standard will be hard for the US Army to achieve, it points in a very different direction than the one we have been following for two decades of hardened command posts
timka
·в прошлом году·discuss
Here's an excerpt from The The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters Volume 53, Number 3 (2023) Autumn [1]

The Russia-Ukraine War is exposing significant vulnerabilities in the Army’s strategic personnel depth and ability to withstand and replace casualties. Army theater medical planners may anticipate a sustained rate of roughly 3,600 casualties per day, ranging from those killed in action to those wounded in action or suffering disease or other non-battle injuries. With a 25 percent predicted replacement rate, the personnel system will require 800 new personnel each day. For context, the United States sustained about 50,000 casualties in two decades of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. In large-scale combat operations, the United States could experience that same number of casualties in two weeks.

[1] https://press.armywarcollege.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article...
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
Well, it's the WSJ. In fact, we do not yet have the final official conclusion of the commission with the participation of Russia and Azerbaijan, which is working on this case. Let's wait and refrain from empty speculation in an already tense international situation.
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
"The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat"
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
You say beginner friendly. How does rwf look like compared to Pavex[1] in this regard?

[1] https://github.com/LukeMathWalker/pavex
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
I think JetBrains is a virus. My folks can't do anything w/o it. They tend to just use what works out of the box and don't want to learn standard open source tools. No wonder after so man years they still suck at command line.

Their IDE still can't do basic things like direnv and nix shell [1]. And when I rant about them being merging master into their feature branches instead of rebasing they say it doesn't matter since JetBrains paints such merges in gray.

https://github.com/Fapiko/intellij-better-direnv/issues/27
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
It's called United Nations Organization. Although it hasn't been fully implemented. It was planned to have nuclear weapon monopoly and strong joint military forces to stop any aggression. Why didn't that happen? Because it's the US that gained the benefits out of both world wars. And its allies aren't allies but minions. Remember what happened to Charles de Gaulle?

Also note that no one has ever declared a war legally since WW II. Because of the UN and international conventions.

I'd also add that it's not entirely correct to consider countries equal top level actors in the historical process now and in the past. Nowadays so called political nations are technically subjects of international right, of course. But, for instance, in pre-Westphalian world that wasn't the case and these days there is plenty of evidence of transnational actors' influence. For example, Vatican dates back to that era I mentioned. And also who owns most the land in Europe? And how come these von Something German nazis avoided The Nuremberg Trials and ended up as board members in big industrial companies?

So no, the world doesn't need a hegemon in your sense. Taking into account the paralysis of the UN since 1991 it's more likely there will be another take on the ruins that.
timka
·2 года назад·discuss
Hm, I wonder if a ultrasonic nebulizer can be used for that.