I like “how to build APIs you won’t hate”.
Works with anything plugged into the wall. Software developer most of the time. Helped start a makerspace once.
Will talk about Linux, plants, space, retro games, and anything else I find interesting.
I like “how to build APIs you won’t hate”.
It would improve the number of eyes if you had full specs. You can arguably identify exploits and bugs much faster.
I also just want RISC-V :)
Agreed. Im hoping to see more RISC-V processors make it to commercial hardware. We are starting to see it with some experimental single board computers and laptops, but they are still much too slow. But its getting there!
https://milkv.io/mars#buy might be a good place to start, although im looking for the spec sheet…
Ive been on the lookout for a “good enough” server with RISC-V. Would love to play around with it.
If your not being paid for on call, dont be on call.
Loved that video back when I was contracting. I paid a lawyer to draft up a standard contract and that was the best thing I ever did. Great value for the $$s. Saved my butt a couple of times.
My muscle memory just finally got used to ip addr lol.
I was about to say, if ip was read only…
Betterment/Weathfront does a lot of this already, but without “AI”. Its just algorithms. It sounds the same…but its really not.
Very true. It’s not so much the hosting, it’s monetary value.
If we fund a peertube instance we could do that.
Most of the COBOL material never made it into the internet. Like the actual instruction manuals for the languages. Also a vast majority that do have it on the internet have it under paywall. I notice that anything that is under paywall, the LLMs suddenly dont do as well. I think its because they only train them on the “open” internet.
Yeah the only reason someone should learn COBOL is job security and potentially making a living moving things over. No reason to start a project in the lang. You can make flat files into ODBCs nowadays.
I suppose the ability to be left alone because everyone is afraid the COBOL person leaves and the company goes under is a good reason :)
If you want to laugh: http://www.coboloncogs.org/HOME.HTM
COBOL is actually not that bad. It can work with SQL, it can have unit testing/integration testing. It can even go on the web (LOL).
But in all seriousness, the bad part about COBOL is lack of context. Most code that is in COBOL has not been touched in decades. And no one is willing to modify because of serous consequences (AKA job ruining errors) that can occur.
I worked with it in insurance and transportation. In both cases, the COBOL was actually pretty solid…but we didnt know WHY we were doing the operations.
Looks like it’s being used, that’s cool. https://social.bbc/public
That’s going to mess up a lot of Google searches.
So how exactly does this work?
Yep all my public repos have it on a ci job. When you have a library that is used on many different projects, I want to be able to read the prs.
Linters make these kind of things easier. Then you get mad at the tool rather than your coworker.
One of my favorite podcasts.