Thanks! README could likely be more concise, yes. It's kinda the main document available without downloading the tool as of now. `git stk guide` offers an interactive set of tutorials to cover sample usage for now.
R.e. commits being turned into branches - a `split` command like Graphite has feels pretty reasonable, I could file an issue for tracking.
Working with some friends to bring humanity back to hiring through conversation: https://lumeirjobs.com
Our vision is to replace resumes with a richer, holistic interpretation of a person's achievements by allowing them to talk about their experience and using that as a base for how they are represented.
The "entities vs tables" distinction is a real one, but I think for the majority of developers who just want to visualize an existing schema quickly, this is more than sufficient. Perfect is the enemy of useful here. Most people aren't building ORM abstractions — they just want to see what's connected to what.
Everyone loves the "free Palestine" slogan, but I've never actually seen the people who call it offer a concrete realistic solution that could achieve that - is it a two state solution? Is it a one state solution that will burst into a civil war? What's the plan?
What does it actually look like?
I still think a two state solution is the only realistic plan.
Great work. A Rust-based approach to stacked workflows feels refreshingly first‑principles.
Tools like this often surface architectural assumptions that linear workflows tend to hide.
Yeah this analysis (Not yours - PG's) is pretty poor tbh either he is intentionally glossing over the tactics and strategy necessary for one to acquire such wealth - or - he really lacks the fundamentals that is value (of equity) is a function of free cash flows to equity, growth and risk. And guess what, immense cash flow potential doesn't fall out the sky. It requires doing certain things. Such things can be considered dirty by many people.
I've been working on a fitness app. It's been a fun project on the side for a while, initially designed to help me keep track of my weekly hours or kilometres on my watch without shipping data to a cloud somewhere. This then grew (with me, as my training and goal did) to include all the other fun things like plans, graphs, notifications, etc.
The app tries to help build good habits - Encouraging and motivating users to achieve their goals.
For a while now I've been working on an open source haptics engine for Gran Turismo 7 that also does some pit radio feedback as well. It currently outputs a bass shaker audio signal for chassis bump, engine vibration (loosely based on engine geometry) and gear change events. I also have wind simulation in the works as well.
I didn't want to run a Windows host for any of the existing solutions so have targeted the Raspberry Pi Zero 2 however the app does compile to Linux, MacOS and Windows so it can run on anything. For the wind simulation I'm playing with an ESP32 based PWM controller which connects over Bluetooth using a custom GATT profile.
I've mentioned it here and there online but have yet to see anyone actually use it other than myself.
A Rust-based tool I've been working on for a bit now, since getting hooked on the stacking workflow at work (we use Graphite mostly).
I didn't like the idea of getting married to a paid product for something so core in my day-to-day work, and other tools I explored (git-town, branchless, jj, spr, etc.) all had elements I didn't like, so I designed and built something for myself. I have tried to refine and expand it into what I think is a very polished tool that aims to work well on Linux, macOS, and Windows, with strong GitHub and GitLab integration (perhaps more eventually).
Nice write-up. I’ve always felt that Amdahl’s Law gets oversimplified in software discussions.
The real bottlenecks tend to be architectural rather than purely parallelizable tasks.
> they could have potentially built a bomb within weeks or months...
Come on now Netanyahu. They've been saying that for last 30 years, no one believes that anymore! The fact is Iran was adhering to the JCPOA and it could have been a viable solution to all this for years to come, until Trump pulled out.
Author here. aarch64 is something I haven't looked into yet. Last time I tried, I was able to boot to userspace on a VisionFive2 (riscv64gc), but it's been a while and the port has likely bit-rotted. It's missing a lot of platform drivers since there is no ACPI firmware on those devices. There is no audio yet, but I do plan on porting Pulse with OSS drivers in the future. Regarding USB, I have a local change set with HID on xHCI, but no Mass Storage support.
Peace - in whatever form is something the world desperately needs at this point.
Having said that, I'll give it three days until Israel does some shit and undos all of this.
This seems to suggest 75 million are under 18.
https://www.neilsberg.com/insights/united-states-population-...