

How will you use the machine without applications?


How will you use the machine without applications?
I’m a big fan of keepachangelog. The only automation I recommend is that this is read from tag to tag and used as nice releases. But a human writing the changelog directly in the “Unreleased” section will always produce the most useful changelog.


That seems nonsequitur and doesn’t address either point.


Okay. You must realize it is weird to use the term “development team” to describe a one person side project. Also, are you willing to disclose to what extent and which models were used to create this project?


Forgive me if I sound negative, but when you say team… what do you mean? Seems like one person with a few commits. Not that it isn’t a very serious attempt at tackling a massive challenge; I’m just curious. Looks a bit like a vibe coded attempt at solving a few things you don’t like about Java. And hey, more power to you.
ducaale/xh is another much like curl. Closer to postman are Hoppscotch and Insomnia.


There is a lot here with varying degrees of helpfulness. I’ll add one thing. Many have commented essentially “build stuff”, and that is solid truth. That’s how you get better. But just like the whole perfect practice makes perfect, there is one fundamental detail that must be included. Build systems that you understand deeply. Not the code; that you are learning. But it is best to build things where you understand the outcome behavior of the system.
For example, if you don’t really understand what graphics rasterization is, building a raster program, even with a good guide, isn’t going to help as much as you might think. Though it will help you understand graphics, so go nuts. But if you really understand how baseball stats are calculated, do something with that. It will be much more gratifying and the code will be the part you’re learning, not the system it is implementing.


Neovim is a great choice anyway.


With that last part I agree. And I’d bet we probably generally agree, but as a matter of perspective our positions look different. I’m not trying to be obtuse here.


This is such a silly line of thinking. To call being gay unnatural is clearly a misuse of the word, but the idea that everything that exists at all is natural is nonsense. For example, hot pink is an unnatural human hair color. Even if you color your hair hot pink, and therefore it exists; that doesn’t make it natural. So in the absence of another word used to describe something that wouldn’t otherwise exist in nature without human intervention, … “unnatural” is perfectly suited to this task.


The words exist across languages because we use them to mean something. If they had neither denotative nor connotative use, your comment itself would not mean anything. That you made the comment seems to me to imply that you know there is a difference.


Well that would just diminish the value of having both words.
Python is strongly typed. I get your point since it is dynamically typed, but still strongly.



Haha. One of you chuckleheads has gone and done it. Whoever you are…
We will be watching your career with great interest.


Oh no; all good. I just didn’t understand. Price is a bit high, but I suppose just a sign of the times.


I don’t know what you mean. There is no squatting here. That is a genuine listing from marcaria.com, one of the few registrars authorized to sell Anguilla domains.


Me too. If I had something of merit to say, I’d consider grabbing it. But it is so surprising that I keep checking after posting this, expecting somebody will grab it.
Wasn’t the fun the CPU cycles we wasted along the way?
Not really much to do here, but it is good to know. Practically speaking, running Rust in Lambda is exactly the same as it has been for a few years. Only difference is they don’t recommend against it in production. Same runtime, same library.