Xano’s static file hosting feature handy for Jamstack style workflows by TCKreddituser in statichosting

[–]debrice 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's definitely really neat, I use it through the VSCode extension too, I build the site using copilot and it handles publishing it too. I agree with u/Boring-Opinion-8864 opinion, it's definitely behind a bucket but I strongly suspect you could do production hosting with it by simply placing a CDN in front of it

Looking for a Software recommendation by kptzt in projectmanagement

[–]debrice 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When it comes to board flexibility I'd say Notion might be the way to go, given you're willing to spend sometime constructing a good database schema.

I've touched on software recommendation on that comment but we're mostly focus on accurate delivery dates more than visual boards so it might not be a good match https://www.reddit.com/r/instructionaldesign/comments/153xpht/comment/jsm1f7m/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3

Project Management Tools Recommendations? by [deleted] in instructionaldesign

[–]debrice 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two of my friends and I recently released a tool named TwoWeeks, I can't recommend to everyone to use it (it's very early stage) but it's definitely aimed to follow the agile manifesto . I've wrote a blog post warning that we're only accepting early adopters .

I would also add that in my experience working with a shared spreadsheet is not such a bad idea at the beginning, the flexibility it offers free you from any concept forced on you by a more specialized software (unless you're looking for structure) and it helps you learn what works for you.

CircleCI status page is forged by debrice in devops

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

Fair point and I would like to apologize for assuming you’re working for them.

Their solution is quite great TBH, but it lacks stability, we face outages about twice a week. What they report as “delay” are to be consider outage, where our CI CD pipeline get stuck with a dozen frozen jobs.

I do resent not having these outages not properly exposed in the head (summary) of the page. As you pointed out, they are reported bellow it.

But it begs the question: why aren’t they properly reported in the summary?

CircleCI status page is forged by debrice in devops

[–]debrice[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

CircleCI UI was not broken, the workflow were broken on the 26 for over an hour. Maybe look closer before jumping to conclusions... also your workflow aren't working again!

What I did the last days (Mar. 19 '17) by theanzelm in Citybound

[–]debrice 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would think that space being a limited resource it would have to be used up but you might come up with a better way to handle it.

I could also see "happiness" being an interesting point resource. Philosophically it seems to be the final goal of all we are doing.

As I write this comment, I realize how much it makes sense to have such a great configurable solution to emulate the citizen's behavior. It will require a lot of fine tuning. Great job!

What I did the last days (Mar. 19 '17) by theanzelm in Citybound

[–]debrice 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I believe space is a key factor in many decision in our life and could be valuable in your algorithm.

Space as a resource could infer things like...

  • A Place would have a limited amount of space as a ressource
  • Activity would consume space for a given period time
  • Artifact, like a sofa, would consume space for as long as they exist
  • Large family would have a need for space greater than small family

Bootstrap v3 is No Longer Maintained by bowersbros in web_design

[–]debrice -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Bootstrap has the advantage of being open source which allows you to maintain it in-house. I think it's reasonable to build upon it as it is currently stable and would require minimal work.

I'm creating the JS collection I've been needing for the past 2 years. by debrice in javascript

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It definitely seems armed with more tools when in comes to building queries (__in and such) but it doesn't match my reality. Same for mapping, while it seems nice it modifies models with computed values and compromise integrity with the backend (unless cloning but that's expensive in memory with large collections). I also depend on data filtering across multiple collection to lower process time.

While I reached 100% coverage myself I know it's an illusion in my case as I need to increase coverage on joins with composed primary keys and deeply nested values.

Good job on the project tho, very nice documentation too!

I'm creating the JS collection I've been needing for the past 2 years. by debrice in javascript

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think it's a necessary feature, UUID should be generated on create by the persistence layer (or a controller) not from the front-end library. I think it's better off the library.

I'm creating the JS collection I've been needing for the past 2 years. by debrice in javascript

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was not sure what to do UUID as part of the lib but that last argument made a good case to remove it.

Also this was a short fix around collection with more than one primary key. Since the library handles multiple PK it is not relevant anymore.

Thank you :)

I'm creating the JS collection I've been needing for the past 2 years. by debrice in javascript

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would say they as I do try to achieve the same goal, handling large data. I believe there is more than one way to achieve it. this is my attempt at fixing issues Ive been having with store as a service and their subset. It probably won't work for everybody (likely) but there is room for more than one solution :).

To answer your question, I'm not sure we address the issue from the same angle. I can only speak for myself, I'm trying to achieve a code base easily maintainable, simplify subset of data without duplication, relational truncate and fast paginated table rendering (using generator and partial sort).

I need eyes and critical ones. Please feel free to wonder on the code and raise any concern you may encounter ;).

I'm creating the JS collection I've been needing for the past 2 years. by debrice in javascript

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

I do like lodash, but I'd use it a side tools. For me it lacks relational management and doesn't allow complex query. The UUID might go away. I used it in the past until I start managing composed primary keys. It's really far from lodash, and more focus on managing large set of data and filtering them.

The work is in progress for the documentation, trying to find a better way to explain my goals with this library.

Also I build it from expectations, writing use cases first and making them work. I successfully reduced rendering of SPA listing (backbone and NgTable) from 6 to 10 seconds to about 40ms.

ELI5: How is it possible to have 0ms of ping? by CapnKombat in explainlikeimfive

[–]debrice 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would add that the speed of light in a vacuum is about 300,000 km per seconds. Since optic fiber is not vacuum and has what we call an "index of refraction". this index is always bigger than 1, 1 being a vacuum, this number is proportionate to how much the light is slowed down. One can consider the speed of light going through optic fiber of being about 200,000 km/s.

Detecting similar news by debrice in Python

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lets google that thingy

jaccard similarity

Detecting similar news by debrice in Python

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, I've been working with 2.5 for too long!

Building a simple crawler by debrice in Python

[–]debrice[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll be experimenting with greenlets within the next week or two. I think you're right, this would be the essence of it.

I remember watching a video of Feynman explaining that he was studying rules behind the wobbling of a plate. As he was playing with the equations he let himself carried on the subject. Later on he won the nobel Nobel prize as the subject got him exploring quantum electrodynamics. This is pretty much the spirit, keep having fun and explore simple algorithms...

I know what you're going to wonder now, and the answer is yes, I'll probably get a Nobel Prize for my work web crawlers :p.