@eric @forgefed and https://forgejo.org/ is probs your best bet. Haven't used it much myself yet. Also https://radicle.xyz/
Rust slower than C? This cannot stand…
Let yourself be nerdsniped for cash!
@rose_alibi Oof yeah. Kinda SOL. Also why I am more into p2p file sharing where you bring a shareable copy with you and sync as-needed. Cloud is infinitely more convenient for folks though.🥲
@rose_alibi IIRC the tech behind Holesail can handle local networks and cellphone networks pretty transparently. Some types of carrier NAT is too much without tunneling through stuff though. IMO it'd be neat if we could ditch internet entirely and use something like LoRa mesh networks, but it's a bit too slow for file sharing.
@rose_alibi I may have misunderstood. Are you talking about folks with only cell phone internet?
@rose_alibi I've been leaning towards stuff like https://holesail.io/ where you can tunnel to your local network using p2p hole punching. Sadly it's more developer focused than "person with a laptop in their closet"
"I am an administrator at New York University, responsible for helping faculty adapt to digital tools. Since the arrival of generative AI, I have spent much of the last two years talking with professors and students to try to understand what is going on in their classrooms. In those conversations, faculty have been variously vexed, curious, angry, or excited about AI, but as last year was winding down, for the first time one of the frequently expressed emotions was sadness. This came from faculty who were, by their account, adopting the strategies my colleagues and I have recommended: emphasizing the connection between effort and learning, responding to AI-generated work by offering a second chance rather than simply grading down, and so on. Those faculty were telling us our recommended strategies were not working as well as we’d hoped, and they were saying it with real distress.
Earlier this semester, an NYU professor told me how he had AI-proofed his assignments, only to have the students complain that the work was too hard. When he told them those were standard assignments, just worded so current AI would fail to answer them, they said he was interfering with their “learning styles.” A student asked for an extension, on the grounds that ChatGPT was down the day the assignment was due. Another said, about work on a problem set, “You’re asking me to go from point A to point B, why wouldn’t I use a car to get there?” And another, when asked about their largely AI-written work, replied, “Everyone is doing it.” Those are stories from a 15-minute conversation with a single professor.
We are also hearing a growing sense of sadness from our students about AI use. One of my colleagues reports students being “deeply conflicted” about AI use, originally adopting it as an aid to studying but persisting with a mix of justification and unease."
https://www.chronicle.com/article/is-ai-enhancing-education-or-replacing-it
#AI #GenerativeAI #Universities #HigherEd #Education #Writing
For one why can't it just pull JSDoc types from dependencies instead of making me jump through hoops. 🤢
I’m currently looking for work.
My previous employer had me writing Java and Python code while working on ML data science tools. I have experience with automated software testing and CI/CD pipelines.
I’m also a skilled iOS/iPadOS/macOS developer, you can see my App Store portfolio at https://maddie.info/
Boosts requested.
@Miaourt I wanna photosynthesize 🌱
> The Demo Gods didn't smile upon me today, but that's okay - we don't need their smiles.
Maaan I knew what's up. I still do demos that occasionally mess up and I doubt I'll stop.
Wealth for businesses doesn’t come from customers anymore; it comes from investors. That’s what extreme wealth inequality does. And risk-tolerant investors are all vibes. So basically a business owner’s ability to get rich depends entirely on just how much bullshit they can get a few billionaires to believe.
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.