I loved the idea of GSS but it never caught on: https://gss.github.io/
I loved the idea of GSS but it never caught on: https://gss.github.io/
As a side note, why do you use this weird non-Github, non-Gitlab, non-Bitbucket sketchy looking git host? I can see the code obviously, but it makes me worry about supply chain security.
It’s made by Drew Devault who is mostly well-respected in the hacker community, and it’s made exactly to be an alternative to BigCo-owned source hosts like GitHub, Gitlab and Bitbucket.
which in my mind was the first “replace” version of ripgrep
grep -> ripgrep
sed -> sd
Nope. Nope, nope, nope. Neither C nor Jekyll are dead.
hx uses the Ropey crate (Rust library) to implement ropes: https://crates.io/crates/ropey
Boehm, Hans-J., Russ Atkinson and Michael Plass (1995) "Ropes: an alternative to strings", Software—Practice & Experience 25: 1315–1330, DOI: 10.1002/spe.4380251203, https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1002/spe.4380251203 (cited 2021-06-01).
I get the point though -- duckduckgo doesn't provide a browser. But I'm guessing Brave doesn't provide hosted email service (Gmail), file and document hosting (Google Drive and Docs) so the analogy breaks down either way.
That snark being said, I do want more privacy on the web -- so yay Brave!
By having it in the browser you are making the browser more bloated (more disk space, more memory, more cache misses) and possibly less stable/secure, even-though less than 1% of the people are going to use this feature. Other issues include increasing the barrier of entry for new browsers, having to deal with differences in implementation of MathML when using it, and making the spec harder to improve.
Second thing is that immortality creates conservatism. Old age does too, but it seems to me immortality over-indexes self-preservation over progress of civilization, where the former is just slightly less of a concern for the individual when lifetimes are as short as they are now.
Compliments aside, where this article stops is where things get exciting. Postgres shines here, as does Vitess, Cassandra, ScyllaDB, even MongoDB has materialized views now. Vitess and Scylla are so good, it’s a shame they’re not more popular among smaller startups!
What I haven’t seen yet is a really good library for managing materialized views.