We need a ManningCast version of the show. For those unaware, ManningCast is a show following an NFL game with special guests and nontraditional commentary and analysis. Think of it kind of like having the Mannings in the living room while watching an NFL game.
In my hypothetical version of "Are you the one?", the math nerds would be giving commentary and explaining the math behind how they'll solve "Are you the one?" while also hilariously explaining how foolish the contestants' theories are.
I feel, honestly, like while you are indeed correct for most cases it’s absolutely fine to use some flavor of uuid. I feel like the benefits outweighs the cost in most cases.
Thanks. This is actually one of the topics I really want to tackle next.
If we just wrap every API call with synchronized, I'd expect heavy contention (some adaptive spinning and then OS-level park/unpark), so it'll likely bottleneck pretty quickly.
Doing something closer to ConcurrentHashMap (locking per bin rather than globally) could mitigate that.
For the open-addressing table itself, I'm also considering adding lightweight locking at the group level (e.g., a small spinlock per group) so reads stay cheap and writes only lock a narrow region along the probe path.
I can confirm that at the congressional working level the difference in public statements have zero reflection on how the parties work together.
Namely, neither the Republicans nor Democrats have done anything whatsoever to reduce or curtail the powers of the federal or state government.
In every possible case where senators and Congress broadly are voting for more powers to spy, kill and otherwise dominate, they vote together the overwhelming majority of the time.
Is that to say that AOC and Crockett are “the same” as Tommy Tuberville?
No but those are the extreme outliers you see in public because they put on a show, and you only hear about a few.
Ultimately the U.S. citizens who vote are ignorant, spiteful, petty, and narcissistic. No different than any other country.
So unless that changes (it biologically can’t) then any effort to proactively solve it are futile in the long term
I'm excited to share a significant enhancement to my open-source project, mini-automatizator!
We've introduced the Workflow Assistant AI . This powerful feature completely changes how you build and manage workflows by helping you effortlessly create and modify nodes, even complex custom nodes using natural language.
Tech Stack Highlights:
- The AI Core: Powered by Gemini LLM and langchain.js (utilizing specialized tools).
-The Backend: Built with node.js, typescript, and express.js.
Piggybacking on this comment to say, I bet a lot of people's first question will be, why aren't you contributing to Octave instead of starting a new project? After reading this declaration of the RunMat vision, the first thing I did was ctrl-f Octave to make sure I hadn't missed it.
Honest question, Octave is an old project that never gained as much traction as Julia or NumPy, so I'm sure it has problems, and I wouldn't be surprised if you have excellent reasons for starting fresh. I'm just curious to hear what they are, and I suspect you'll save yourself some time fielding the same question over and over if you add a few sentences about it. I did find [1] on the site, and read it, but I'm still not clear on if you considered e.g. adding a JIT to Octave.
The OSS point doesn't apply to every vertical. Open source applications come about when developers scratch their own itch. Developer tools, infrastructure, general purpose CRMs, project management — these get OSS alternatives because developers use them and want to build them.
Nobody is building open source software for [niche professional vertical] in their spare time. It's not mass market. It's not something a developer encounters in their daily work and thinks "I could do this better." The domain knowledge required to even understand the problem space takes months to acquire, and there's no personal payoff for doing so.
The "OSS will appear" prediction works for horizontal tools. For deep vertical SaaS, the threat model is different: it's other funded startups or internal enterprise clones (both of which we've already faced and won against).
Ah, you are right. It theoretically should be able to do it, but even with -flto, there are likely cases, where it doesn't. It is less of a problem with C, since you explicitly tell the compiler, whether you want things to get passed as value or pointer. Also I typically annotate ownership, so it it easy to forget that the compiler doesn't actually knows this. This is a weird limitation, there should be just a parameter attribute to do that.
> The proposed Active-AWD Trade Platform utilizes a Through-the-Road (TTR) Hybrid architecture to decouple the mechanical drivetrain while maintaining synchronized propulsion via a Vehicle Control Unit (VCU). By integrating high-topology Axial Flux or Radial-Axial (RAX) in-wheel motors, the system achieves exceptional torque density within the limited packaging of a trailer wheel well. The control strategy relies on Zero-Force Emulation, utilizing a bi-directional load cell at the hitch to modulate torque output via a PID loop, ensuring the module remains neutrally buoyant to the tow vehicle during steady-state cruising. In low-traction environments, the system transitions to Virtual AWD, employing Torque Vectoring to mitigate sway and Regenerative Braking to prevent jackknifing, effectively acting as an intelligent e-Axle retrofit. This configuration leverages 400V/800V DC architecture for rapid energy discharge and V2L (Vehicle-to-Load) site power, solving the unsprung weight damping challenges through advanced suspension geometry while eliminating the parasitic drag of traditional passive towing.
A modular truck bed could have
Through-the-road TTR AWD (given a better VCU) and e.g. hub motors or an axle motor.
Appreciate the comment actually! It's good feedback -- we weren't sure if it's mixing work/memes too much, and keeping our materials clean like engineering docs are probably a good way to go. We may edit it out of the post.