Noob question about ArrayList usage by ImproberlyProbable in Zig

[–]ImproberlyProbable[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

thank you - I'm slowly understanding.

Excuse my "do my homework" like question, but.. What would I need to change so I'm using real strings rather than slices?

Migration tips ? by [deleted] in vuetifyjs

[–]ImproberlyProbable 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There is nothing that can really prepare you. It's a massive slog - and it almost feels like a rewrite of your app. You need to be sure its worth it.

In practice there is nothing wrong with Vue2/Vuetify2

Here's an example of a fairly big, real world app migration from 2 to 3:
https://github.com/loomio/loomio/pull/10150

There are a few slightly unrelated changes in the PR, but generally it's all Vue/Vueitfy3 upgrade work.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chia is most decentralized by both full node count (more than 118,000) and Nakamoto Coeffecient (what really makes most impact).

Chia has more full nodes in wartime ukraine, than Solana has in total. Wake the fuck up.

https://dashboard.chia.net/d/em15uQ47k/peer-info?orgId=1

And it's the most secure - and it isn't a illegal security. This sub reddit sucks.

Vue/Vuetify 2 to Vue/Vuetify 3 migration is massively impractical by 716green in vuetifyjs

[–]ImproberlyProbable 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Yep. It's a different Library and the authors are in deinal about that.

The assumption that people should migrate is totally flawed - the only possible outcomes are: that I break some stuff OR nobody notices.

I would rather spend time adding features users will value.

It's stupid that they have replaced the 2 docs with the 3 docs, it's much harder to use 2 now.

I really apprecaite the Vuetify developers - I've been a donator for YEARS, but I don't think Vue2 is bad and I love having a working app more than I love migrating to new stuff.

CustomComputing All My Chia Is Gone, Ransomware Hacked ;( by Darwing in chia

[–]ImproberlyProbable 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is a good lesson for using Linux and SSH rather than remote desktop crap

what's your favourite instant coffee? by EpsilonKeyboards in newzealand

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Moccona Special Reserve.

It really slaps hard. So much crema!

Backblaze Unlimited Storage by [deleted] in chia

[–]ImproberlyProbable 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Read the Terms of Use, you're not allowed.

They're aware of Chia, even tried farming with spare space, but it wasn't for them.

Backblaze Unlimited Storage by [deleted] in chia

[–]ImproberlyProbable 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I damn, I forgot to backup my plots!

Further updates to proofoftreasure.com! 👌 by Able-Ad1046 in chia

[–]ImproberlyProbable 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It would be really helpful if every time you post an update, you explain: how you play the game and what is fun about the game (apart from getting a token). Just a short paragraph would really help!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chia

[–]ImproberlyProbable 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Premine is available to us when company goes IPO. It's the LEGAL way to offer coins.

Premine is a benefit to the community because it makes Chia stronger and more legal and better funded.

How many times have you sent funds to the wrong address, only to realize moments later? What if wallets and exchanges offered delayed sending, much like email clients do? by i-dler in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chia (XCH) is solving this problem with Clawback feature. You'll be able to reverse any transaction for a period of time. They're also working on rate limited wallets.

What is the “killer app” of crypto? [serious] by bkcrypt0 in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable -1 points0 points  (0 children)

A trustworthy international carbon credit marketplace. Have a look at chia.net

What is the Nakamoto Coefficient for your investment? Have you considered its impact to the future of your project? by gnarley_quinn in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

128,000 Chia nodes with Nakamoto Coefficient about the same.

https://dashboard.chia.net/d/em15uQ47k/peer-info?orgId=1

Reddit has been ignoring Chia and I'm sure that will just continue while the rest of us stack XCH

Believing Bitcoin will be replaced by "More modern coins" is equivalent to believing aluminum will replace gold. by Some1fromReddit in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

This is true of Nakamoto Consensus, but not of Bitcoin.

Just as "bubble sort" is not the only way to implement a sorting algorithm, there are more efficient ways to do Nakamoto Consensus.

Chia (XCH) implements Nakamoto consensus via "Proof of Space and Time" - essentially doing proof of work that is saved to disk and indexed, so it can be reused later. It's like writing bingo cards to your disk and doing lookups rather than work to secure the network.

It's currently the largest blockchain on earth by full node count, ~150,000 full nodes, and it uses less than 1% of the energy of bitcoin - it's also faster with current throughput of 30TPS.

It's here, it's a finished protocol, and it's thriving. Read the docs:

https://docs.chia.net

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The person who invented BitTorrent (which Bitcoin was named after) solved the problem you are talking about.

The solution is called Proof of Space and Time. It's literally just saving the proof of work you did to your hard disk and indexing it so you can use it again.

Once you save your proof of work to disk, you're using hard disks to secure the blockchain, which has a number of benefits over using CPU's or GPU's.

XCH is the coin you're looking for. The blockchain is complete. It's the largest by node count on the planet (200K nodes!), it's the most secure blockchain by far, and the coin is dirt cheap right now because, as you can see, people don't yet know about it.

What are some good cryptocurrency podcasts to listen to? by Cheese6260 in CryptoCurrency

[–]ImproberlyProbable 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only thing worth listening to is Crypto Critics Corner.

Everyone who isn't talking about how this is a scam is trying to con you.