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An update on RSC port to Clojure: form actions, data fetching, batching, caching and error handling romanliutikov.com/blog/towards...

i still kinda want reddit for bluesky. is anyone working on this

moving to rollup was a gamechanger for react repo’s build process (imo). rollup and gcc (closure compiler)

love that RSC lets you do this kind of stuff. needed to change my MDX to transform and inline SVGs as part of the build. just dropped a readFile into my img component

healing

you're building a new social media app in 2025, it's gonna be a web-app first and foremost (eventually OS native), you want simplicity and building to be easy, you're not interested in the latest shiny toy which framework/language do you use to build it?

hard to overstate how excited i am about this RFC — @dummdidumm.bsky.social is doing incredible work. this raises the bar for data fetching in frameworks, and unlocks some very cool new use cases for SvelteKit. we have a lot more ideas that will build on top of this work github.com/sveltejs/kit...

New blog post: Composable streaming with Suspense One of my favorite patterns lately has been using Suspense to stream in lazily loaded content. It's perfect for dynamic dropdown menu options. twofoldframework.com/blog/composa...

hell yeah github.com/bluesky-soci...

Cool atproto apps thread!

writing a non-react post 👀

it's cool that Excalidraw has groups. but i wish setting an opacity for a group would treat it as a single composite layer. instead of tweaking the individual opacity of each element inside

this one has been bugging me so i sent a PR to Next docs. github.com/vercel/next.... maybe not the best way to explain it but it needs to be explained somewhere! many people don't know it exists

ok this one was enjoyable too. not sure i have the patience to dig into exercises but maybe i should. pytorch looks usable and not too scary in the grander scheme of things im not sure how useful it is to dig into these fundamental. i guess im partially curious and partially fomo

kind of want to record an RSC video course but real tension between making it free on youtube and uh making money not sure if people still pay for courses

turning a big dial saying weights on it

watching this vid now. what really strikes me is that types are kind of important (much discussion about floats vs ints, or about making sure division makes sense and you don’t squash things or confuse rows with columns). can somebody explain why is using Python for this a good idea

every time i try to learn something new i get surprised by how much i want to sleep

yea honestly this video is fantastic, very inspiring in terms of how to teach things. it’s much more intuitive than most introductory neural network materials

started watching this one but at 22:36 i no longer know what’s going on, gonna try to backtrack to his earlier videos