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  1. iliana.fyi, , more info

    Experimenting with GitHub merge queues; could you send me a PR?
    I’m evaluating the usability of GitHub merge queues under a set of conditions that makes merge queues hard: pull requests have a high probability of failing CI when merged together despite passing on their own. (Plus, GitHub’s implementation has like 11 different knobs, and the documentation is somewhat limited.) I could make a bunch of PRs on my own, but that’s boring, and I’m not good at finding edge cases …
    By iliana etaoin, 217 words
  2. Breakfast and Travel Updates, , more info

    Day 7: Te Whanganui-a-Tara
    WelcomeYesterday we played a show in the Great Hall of the Dominion Museum in Whanganui a Tara. I returned for the second day to Akin for breakfast, the café with a name that I still couldn’t think of a pun for but an establishment that I now trusted to provide me with the nutrition to get me through a day of travelling and performing. Moving into the savoury section of …
    By Benjamin Sinclair, 960 words
  3. GeePawHill.org – Weekly Posts, , more info

    Basic Concepts of the “Making App”
    Let’s talk about the basic concept of the "making app". I’ve written about this before, and demoed it in some of my public project walk-throughs, but there’s no single straightforward explanation out there, so let’s take a swing. What is a "making app", and why might one want to roll one for a project? In […]
    By Brian Kimble, 62 words
  4. Ideas.Offby1, , more info

    uv, direnv, and simple .envrc files
    I have adopted uv for a lot of Python development. I'm also a heavy user of direnv, which I like as a tool for setting up project-specific environments. Much like Hynek describes, I've found uv sync to be fast enough to put into the chdir path for new directories. Here's how I'm doing it. Direnv Libraries First, it turns out you can pretty easily define custom direnv functions like the …
    By Chris Rose, 476 words
  5. Belgian Smaak, , more info

    Trappistenhuis Den Herberg
    Trappistenhuis Den Herberg in Waasmunster is a volkscafé offering Trappist beers, Geuze, and sourdough bread made with Chimay yeast. The post Trappistenhuis Den Herberg appeared first on Belgian Smaak.
    By Cliff Lucas, 32 words
  6. Paweł U., , more info

    How to use Cloudflare Workers proxy with Rust
    Visits counter was a critical feature of every website just 20 years ago. In this tutorial, we will implement it with Rust Cloudflare Workers by adding persistence and dynamic behaviors to an otherwise static page. We will also discuss other practical use cases of CF workers edge proxy. Static blog with CF edge caching Visits: [VISITS_COUNT] This blog is a static JekyllRB website hosted on an EC2 behind an NGINX …
    1,091 words
  7. the urban prehistorian, , more info

    Lot 172
    Me, tracing my fingers in and out of the coarse surface of cupmarks on a stone in the sun, with red paint marks on the rock beside me. Again. Not in Faifley, but Oslo. To be precise this happened on a walk with fellow archaeologist Ingrid Mainland in Ekebergparken, on the south side of the harbour fjord of the Norwegian capital city. The park is better known for a stunning …
    By balfarg, 1,651 words
  8. Kevin Cox - All Articles, , more info

    Hiking in the Yukon
    I recently took a trip to the Yukon (and two days in Alaska) with my partner Elaine. The trip was mostly hiking focused and generally enjoying the nature. We took almost two weeks which was a good amount of time for us. Enough to not rush and soak in a lot of nature but not so long that our legs really started hurting and we started missing the comforts of …
    2,439 words
  9. Beth's Bobbins, , more info

    Original: Print Dress, c.1825
    I like the stripes on this one: the contrast between the vertical stripes on the bodice and skirt, the horizontal stripe on the skirt, and diagonal of the bias-cut sleeves. The maker even made the effort to align the stripes on the cape and bodice at the center front.Dress, cotton, c.1825. From LACMA.
    By Beth, 57 words
  10. AI Weirdness, , more info

    Botober 2024
    Back by popular demand, here are some AI-generated drawing prompts to use in this, the spooky month of October!Longtime AI Weirdness readers may recognize some of these. That's because this is a throwback list, all the way back to the times of very tiny language models. These models had not feasted on huge chunks of the internet, but had sipped delicately on hand-curated artisanal datasets. They trained rather slowly on …
    By Janelle Shane, 170 words
  11. erock's blog, , more info

    on writing
    I often think about writing a feature like writing a story. If I do my job well, it is coherent and easy to read, write, and maintain. When there's a lot of indirection, it feels like a book with its pages out-of-order. There seems to be a lot of similarities as well. We have readers, it just so happens that our readers are machines -- as well as our colleagues. …
    388 words
  12. Lea Verou • Blog, , more info

    Web Components are not Framework Components — and That’s Okay
    Disclaimer: This post expresses my opinions, which do not necessarily reflect consensus by the whole Web Components community. A blog post by Ryan Carniato titled “Web Components Are Not the Future” has recently stirred a lot of controversy. A few other JS framework authors pitched in, expressing frustration and disillusionment around Web Components. Some Web Components folks wrote rebuttals, while others repeatedly tried to get to the bottom of the …
    1,923 words
  13. Cam Pegg: Digital product and strategy guy, , more info

    October 1 2024, 10:14am
    There are two possible outcomes: if the result confirms the hypothesis, then you’ve made a measurement. If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you’ve made a discovery.—Enrico FermiReply via email or Mastodon.
    38 words
  14. Dr. Roseanne Chambers – Blog, , more info

    Essential Metals from Antiquity to AI
    Ancient indigenous people used seven so-called “Metals of Antiquity”: gold, silver, copper, tin, lead, iron, and mercury. Today, our complex societies require a much longer list of metals. We build components for power generation, transportation, health care, consumer electronics, defense, and many more sectors from metals and other minerals that are sourced from around the world. Industries will need to find many new metal and mineral sources, and open new …
    By Roseanne Chambers, 1,856 words
  15. The Incredible Inman, , more info

    "Ladies of Leisure," or Easel to Love
    Barbara Stanwyck enters the 1930 film "Ladies of Leisure" -- and film history -- in a rowboat. The oars squeak. Her face is marked by mascara-streaked tears and she's clutching a broken dress strap. She's Kay, a party girl who just left a wild one on a yacht.On shore is Ralph Graves as Jerry, who's also left a wild party, this one at his Manhattan penthouse. He's gone for a …
    By David, 677 words