I have a book on learning Pytorch, this XKCD is in the first chapter and implementing this is the first code practice. It’s amazing how things progress.
Developer, 11 year reddit refugee
I have a book on learning Pytorch, this XKCD is in the first chapter and implementing this is the first code practice. It’s amazing how things progress.
I’m really enjoying Otterwiki. Everything is saved as markdown, attachments are next to the markdown files in a folder, and version control is integrated with a git repo. Everything lives in a directory and the application runs from a docker container.
It’s the perfect amount of simplicity and is really just a UI on top of fully portable standard tech.
but if you need me to leave, I can. I get that a lot.
I don’t think OP is suggesting this. It’s simply a reminder to those who have the privilege of having extra income that contributing to the core devs improves the experience for everyone, regardless of their individual ability to contribute.
I’m personally happy to donate if it means everyone gets to continue enjoying the growth of the platform, as the real value of the threadiverse is user activity.
They keep updating the list every week even if you’re not listening. Also I’ve used their service for years so they have me pretty well figured out.
Unfortunately no, but any client that supports the subsonic api will work
Navidrome natively supports scrobbling. I also scrobble from Clementine on my desktop.
I’m downloading individual tracks much more than I’m downloading entire albums.
You say that as though there’s some kind of crystal ball we can all look into and see all of the obstacles that will need to be cleared and prepare accordingly. That’s not how scaling web services works, especially distributed ones that are built on a relatively new protocol.
A lot of armchair developers in here who think there is an easy solution to distributed identity
Who was the idiot
The W3C, also known as the people who develop the web standards. It’s a reasonable expectation as you have to draw a line in the sand somewhere. Distributed identity is not a solved problem, so domains are the best solution we have right now.
What would you suggest they use as the identifier with which allows other entities uniquely identity you? There are no alternatives until you introduce a ton of cryptography, which is what DID hopes to address, but that’s still going to be bad UX.
Yes, that’s my point.
Just because it’s not using your personal preference of containerization doesn’t qualify it as being “hacked together”. Docker is a perfectly acceptable solution for what Lemmy is.
Yes I do! It’s a pretty great overview that isn’t extremely math heavy
The book is “Deep Learning for Coders with Fastai and PyTorch: AI Applications Without a PhD”
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1492045527