dmorganb
19.8K posts

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
dmorganb retweetledi
dmorganb retweetledi

.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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@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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@p_mbanugo pretty cool! did you choose Odin for any particular reason?
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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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dmorganb retweetledi

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 retweetledi

dmorganb retweetledi
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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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