YyyyyuuuuP. I've always called Denver, "Omaha with a view of the mountains".
notroot
Yup. Emacs, here, but same thing. Never used PyCharm or any other Python-capable IDE, and I've been coding large python projects for the same company for almost a decade.
Meta is releasing threads.net which will (eventually) join the Fediverse.
It's a much bigger topic of discussion over on #Mastodon, #Calckey, etc.
YyyyyyyyyyuuuuuuuuuuuuuP.
I've been arrested twice... both times misdemeanors with no jail time.
The most memorable part for me was being instructed to strip naked, then squat and spread my cheeks so they could see my asshole and make sure I didn't have a plastic baggy of cocaine or shiv turtle-heading.
I seriously doubt Trump had to suffer the same indignity, despite being charged with felonies.
Dammit!!! Beat me to it 🤣
These are certainly possibilities! It's happened elsewhere in the Fediverse... but already we can export most of our data and migrate to a different instance. Getting these base features right is important before enhancing their functionality. Planning for the future is important too. So far I've been impressed by Lemmy, though it's not nearly as portable as Mastodon or Calckey or Pleroma etc. Part of that is that in Lemmy/kbin we don't follow other users... we subscribe to groups (subs/communities/magazines).
Still, with the nature of ActivityPub, it's inevitable that migration tools for Reddit-like federated apps will get built quick-like
You can use Pixelfed ... you can then follow yourself from elsewhere in the Fediverse. Or just use it to make links and post those.
Don't tell me what to do! Heheheheh
Lots and lots at work...
But my only real side project right now is a scheduler and supervisor... "If cron and supervisord had a super-powered love child".
I'm very close to releasing v1 so I'm not gonna jinx it by revealing too much, but it's already in production use by two companies, one of which is enterprise-level, using it to process MASSIVE data somewhere in the entertainment industry... and yes, it's gonna be FOSS, with MIT license.
It emphasizes a declarative approach to reproducing clusters of orchestrated job-runners on low-cost cloud infrastructure. Makes it easy to scale and even map-reduce.
Includes 3 interfaces: CLI (for everything), API (for most things), and UI (for most things).
It's gonna be sick heheh. I'll be sure to come back here once you can pip install
it.
Emacs zealot here ... can confirm we're like this ;)