dmorganb

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dmorganb

dmorganb

@dmorganb

Doubt them, question them, suspect them... and take a good long look into their hearts - Mr. Akiyama

Katılım Temmuz 2009
168 Takip Edilen261 Takipçiler
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Rick Rubin
Rick Rubin@RickRubin·
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
Vaaamos
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
partidazo
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Milan Jovanović
Milan Jovanović@mjovanovictech·
.NET 10 kills the ceremony. You can now run a single C# file directly using 𝗱𝗼𝘁𝗻𝗲𝘁 𝗿𝘂𝗻. No Main method. No project files. No csproj. Just C# code. You can reference NuGet packages, set MSBuild properties, even build APIs using only a .cs file. It works great for one-off scripts, seeders, utilities, or demos. And when things grow, you can convert the file into a full project with one command. This isn’t a separate runtime. It’s just the .NET SDK. Full write-up: milanjovanovic.tech/blog/run-cshar… Would you use this in your workflow?
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
Golazo 🟥⬜
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Justine Tunney
Justine Tunney@jartine·
@NielsHoven What we need is a culture that values doing the work. Instead we have a culture that values administering the work. So the system makes everyone an administrator, while the people who did work feel unvalued and retire.
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
@p_mbanugo pretty cool! did you choose Odin for any particular reason?
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Peter Mbanugo
Peter Mbanugo@p_mbanugo·
Instead of colored functions or promise hell, you write Isolates (They don't block nor await). An Isolate receives a message, updates its state, and returns an Effect (Yield, Receive/Reply, IO, Crash) to the user-space scheduler.
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Peter Mbanugo
Peter Mbanugo@p_mbanugo·
What happens when you combine Erlang-style concurrency + @ScyllaDB's Seastar speed + @TigerBeetleDB deterministic simulation? Meet Tina: A strictly bounded, fault-tolerant, thread-per-core concurrency framework. 🧵👇
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Zain Shah
Zain Shah@zan2434·
Imagine every pixel on your screen, streamed live directly from a model. No HTML, no layout engine, no code. Just exactly what you want to see. @eddiejiao_obj, @drewocarr and I built a prototype to see how this could actually work, and set out to make it real. We're calling it Flipbook. (1/5)
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
nunca choveu que non escampara
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Andrés Weiss
Andrés Weiss@andresweiss_·
Una pequeña historia para hoy: El Union Berlin, antes de cada partido, grita ‘FUSSBALLGOTT’ (Dios del Fútbol) a cada jugador cuando repasan el XI inicial. Para Marie-Louise Eta cambian el grito, y la llaman FUSSBALLGÖTTIN (Diosa del Fútbol). Y venden bufandas con eso.
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
Interesante
Devon Eriksen@Devon_Eriksen_

Most people think of philosophy as an abstraction that doesn't touch the real world, but they're wrong. Most real world problems are philosophy problems, and most philosophy problems are "giving things the wrong names". For example, if you call feral drug addicts "homeless people", then you can't solve the problem. You can only buy more houses for feral drug addicts to destroy. In this case, we called the police and courts the "justice system". But they're not. They can't be the justice system. The function of a justice system would be to give everyone what they deserve. Now, I deserve a hundred million dollars, a private Caribbean island, and a foot massage from Lauren Bacall in her prime, but I don't see the "justice" system lifting a finger to correct any of this, do you? No, what we are supposed to have is a public safety system. The function of a public safety system is to keep the public and their property safe. If we understood that, we wouldn't care about what criminals deserve. We would care how likely they are to do it again. Or something worse. In a public safety system, retardation and mental illness are not migrating factors. They are the opposite. Because they mean that the criminal is more likely to pose a future threat. We all understand this. We all understand that the feral retard who stabs strangers on the train for being White and beautiful is a worse person than the man who murders his wife and her lover when he catches them in the act. Not because of some abstract calculus of moral agency, of who is disadvantaged and who isn't, but because one is certainly going to murder more people if he can, while the other is a lot less likely to. We've known for centuries, if not millennia, that it's the same small percentage of people doing all the robbing, raping, and murdering, over and over and over again. And we've known for centuries that if you physically remove them from society, that's 100% effective in stopping them from doing it again. The only hurdle is philosophical. Call it a "justice" system, and you have to argue endlessly about morality and redemption, and then some leftie thug-hugger weaponizes your own Christianity against you. Call it public safety, and you confine the argument to likelihood of reoffense. Then you are in the realm of statistics. Which you can compute. It all starts with naming things correctly, according to their actual nature.

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Jorge Barraza
Jorge Barraza@JorgeBarrazaOK·
El diario Welt, de Alemania, bajo el título "EL PEOR DE LOS PERDEDORES", dice "El Real Madrid pierde y culpa al árbitro".
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dmorganb
dmorganb@dmorganb·
Como me gusta ver a Vinicius desquiciado jaja
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MisterChip (Alexis)
MisterChip (Alexis)@2010MisterChip·
‼️Nuevo vídeo ‼️ Vuelven las preguntas y respuestas al canal 🔥⚽ Me habéis enviado muchísimas preguntas y en este primer vídeo hemos seleccionado las más interesantes, mezclando la Copa del Mundo con temas más personales. Al lío👇📸
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Paula Pant
Paula Pant@AffordAnything·
The WSJ just ran the most depressing headline in human history. The piece is a first-person column from two retirees. They say that without bosses, deadlines, or meetings, there's nothing to interrupt zombie doomscrolling. "We retirees have a particular vulnerability," writes one of the co-authors, Stephen Kreider Yoder, a retired WSJ editor. "We have time on our hands and no external authority telling us to snap out of it." "Let's have a show of hands: "How many retirees have ended a day looking up from the phone, wondering where the time went and feeling the mental equivalent of having finished off a family-size bag of potato chips?" "Yeah," he writes. "That's what I thought." We spend decades trying to buy back our time ... and then spend it staring at our screens.
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