xrl.bsky.social
54 posts
15 followers
62 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
comment in response to
post
Take care!
comment in response to
post
That sounds like a fun move. Enjoy!
comment in response to
post
comment in response to
post
All from cutting booze, he says
comment in response to
post
Sounds like an opportunity to get your steps in
comment in response to
post
The low transmission glass is also impressive, the heat does not spread and it cools very fast. Overall a fun, geeky splurge that has helped me up my game. I also love not having the occasional smell of gas in the house.
comment in response to
post
I call it my infinite power machine. Sure it boils water crazy fast and strong, but it's also so damn responsive. I got the discontinued built-in touch models which has some response issues but is easy to clean.
comment in response to
post
Github Actions recently enabled ARM64 runners for opensource projects. I can finally run stuff natively, no more impossibly slow QEMU pipelines. And all the popular actions are going catch up and let me run self-hosted ARM64 runners pretty much transparently.
comment in response to
post
In case you were concerned, I just had to clear the cache, clear local data, and reinstally spotify. Easy.
comment in response to
post
Now I have to buy $DDOG stock in solidarity
comment in response to
post
Are you going to be staffing up on Rust engineers? Please be sure to holler on here. I, for one, wouldn't mind working from Paris!
comment in response to
post
I don't think datadog has any interest in supporting an open core competitor to their money maker. And without the dedicated hardwork of the founders, things will wither away.
I'm pretty sure I'm a harbinger user at this point!
comment in response to
post
I'd love to see sustainable opensource.
I noticed quickwit has tigress slowing down, the discord wasn't super active, and the quickwit enterprise feature wasn't getting much publicity. I thought it was all over. The relicensing is nice. Maybe the community will take over.
comment in response to
post
They have pulled off quite the coup -- agreed, totally. I think quickwit has proven to be very impressive tech, I won't be uninstalling it from my infrastructure anytime soon. But also, I'm curious if I can keep running this worldclass solution in the long run without future updates.
comment in response to
post
I hadn't seen much movement on quickwit so I thought it might be folding. I hope datadog continue as stewards of the project like they have with the vector data pipeline tool. but based on the total lack of mention, I think quickwit is essentially a dead-end on future work.
comment in response to
post
My nephews have to disable cookie clicker assists before booting steam games, the cheat detector blocks them
comment in response to
post
Waking up 👎
comment in response to
post
Cue the Elmo on a toilet gif
comment in response to
post
Care to set the record straight?
comment in response to
post
He's so pleased with himself he doesn't care 💓
comment in response to
post
I met Pete Levasseur at RustConf in Montreal and then a few weeks later there was a good chat on Rustacean Station. Getting Rust in to the car industry is definitely a fascinating subject!
comment in response to
post
Break the poison down until it's just molecules 😏
comment in response to
post
That's a big change! Quickwit getting all hands on deck? Bonne chance!
comment in response to
post
But if you're trying to go lower than KIND... gotta recommend Kelsey Hightower's Kubernetes the Hard Way 😀
comment in response to
post
Once you've spun up the local kube cluster you can play around with running containers and working your way up the abstraction tree.
comment in response to
post
I highly recommend starting with a KIND. It's a CLI which talks to you docker, sets up a "toy" kubernetes, and also configures your ~/.kube/config to access the KIND cluster.
comment in response to
post
Have a good one amigo
comment in response to
post
It might be nice for GitHub to pump up the basic runners in the future. I'm a choosy beggar lol
comment in response to
post
The rust setup action I'm using invokes this cache action as well. I never let the release build go the full hour so the cache has not been populated.
comment in response to
post
Turning of `--release` was the move. I don't need the axum webserver for this example. Sure shouldn't take 10 minutes to compile but moving on!
comment in response to
post
You had me google Laurie Metcalf and subsequently her birth town of Carbondale, IL. This google maps photo cracked me up
comment in response to
post
Very cool. I'm using cxx with some rdkit bindings. I find I can't express as many signatures as I'd like but when it works, boy howdy, it's neat. I will try benchmarking different linker configs now that you bring it up
comment in response to
post
Are you using cxx or something else?
comment in response to
post
Great talk! I hope to hear more about programmable CAD in the future