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Álex Córcoles (coding)

@coder@alex.femto.pub

This is the profile where I talk about coding and technology in English.

80 Posts Posts & Replies 33 Following 8 Followers Search
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My "production stuff":

- github.com/festivus-es/festivu - public holidays calendars for Spanish cities
- github.com/remote-es/remotes - companies hiring in Spain for remote positions

Usable WIPs:

- alexpdp7.github.io/selfhostwat - track self-hosting package updates (such as YunoHost)
- github.com/alexpdp7/ubpkg/ - package manager for "upstream binaries"
- github.com/alexpdp7/termflux - Miniflux terminal client

developers.googleblog.com/en/c

So I rarely do anything that would make sense to do on Flutter, but I'm surprised by how little I hear about it. Dart has a few surprises. Also, the article says:

> In the Apple AppStore it has grown ... to nearly 30% of all tracked free apps in 2024!

Most likely, most of those free apps are not good, so we don't know how much Flutter is used for *good* apps.

sfba.social/@drahardja/1136725

leads to:

papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf

> We study the return to office (RTO) policies ... Consistent with the model's predictions, we find that office rents in the firm's headquarters city determine RTO policy ... Finally, we find no significant stock market reaction to policy announcements.

Hello I wrote a thing about how Android made a good privacy improvement and in the process apparently made key attestation far less useful for certain use cases mjg59.dreamwidth.org/70630.htm

When it comes to non-free firmware I think there's two reasonable positions - treat it like non-free code running on a remote system (suboptimal, outside the scope of current free software priorities) or treat it like software running on the primary CPU (all code on the local system should be free software, no matter where it's running). I think the FSF's position is unreasonable: mjg59.dreamwidth.org/70895.htm

survey.stackoverflow.co/2024/t

27.7% of professional developers use Ubuntu as their "primary operating system for work". (Plus a few other Linux are there.) I don't really trust the survey (how can primary choices total more than 100%, and how WSL and Cygwin are there?), but if it's remotely close to reality, that "Linux is not viable for work"...

(Better data welcome.)

The way that "ChatGPT outputs libel about person X" was solved by adding a kill switch for his specific name doesn't really suggest these AI engineers have much influence over what their models are saying.

arstechnica.com/information-te

Once you're terminally online for a while you realize how much of online discourse is driven by a handful of terminally online people. After you scratch the surface of some "The X community thinks Y" statement, it turns out Y is just the opinion of two guys named John and Mike that are very prolific on some forum, have had a blog for 25 years, and last looked at X in 2012.

etbe.coker.com.au/

Russell Coker's blog is one of the remaining gems from the golden era where following blogs was *the* way to be updated. I still follow it through Planet Debian, which was another *AWESOME* concept that is becoming lost to the mists of time.

The latest link roundup is quite nice. I wasn't aware Nvidia was also on the RISC-V train. I'm not holding my breath, but I'm kinda eager to see if RISC-V shakes things significantly in a couple of years.

Honestly, we are currently out of ideas on how to restore access to Codeberg.org.

We are fighting with extreme traffic and high load for several hours now, we have done the typical procedure to identify and block misbehaving AI crawlers.

However, we are currently having a hard time figuring out details about the ongoing high traffic situation.

Tech, education, FediMeta

Pet peeve: do not create a repo on GitHub (or your favorite forge) until you have at least a README with a "why". (I normally wait until I have a small usable piece of code, even if it has no UI and needs to be used as a library or through a REPL.)

Or, well, do... I can always fantasize :D

(To me, GitHub is more of a social network :D)

just found out someone is building an independent JS-supporting terminal web browser in a memory-safe language: git.sr.ht/~bptato/chawan/

looks promising because so far all the other independent browsers other than Firefox are stuck using C or C++, which like ... have we learned nothing?

but also there's completely unhinged stuff like git.sr.ht/~bptato/chawan/tree/ (and I haven't thought about it enough to figure out whether "unhinged" is a compliment or not yet)

"If it's free you are the product" is up there with "you know Google once said 'don't be evil'" in the list of vapid clichés in 'critical' tech writing. Open software is free. Are users of any given open source system the product? Not really, eh? How about readers of free books and articles? Yeah, just stop repeating that. Being free isn't the problem. The business model of the entity offering the good is the problem.

I made a thing. Please do not hesitate to point me in the direction of more forms to fill. wtf-8.xn--stpie-k0a81a.com

I feel this in my bones.

Preparing to help to work with Java to someone that uses Pop!_OS and Visual Studio Code. The Pop!_Shop offers by default Visual Studio Code as a Flatpak. The Flatpak does not seem to provide reasonable instructions to install the JDK in a Flatpak situation. I revert and install Visual Studio Code through their official website, which offers a .deb package (which in my experience is easier). The integrated package installer hangs indefinitely installing the package.

Around 2000, my university provided web hosting for students. This was static web hosting, of course. I wanted my website, and setting it up using HTML was too tedious. So I decided to create my website using PHP, run wget --mirror to scrape it, and upload it to the static web hosting service.

(I don't think that was a novel idea even back then.)

My current personal project is implemented with Django and I run with Kubernetes. This project scraps data and stores it in a PostgreSQL database.

OK, I think I have most of the YunoHost catalogue "scraped"; I have the version history of the applications on YunoHost, and the matching Git tag history for the related repos. Daily scraping should get this updated.

Next step is to set up publishing of the data for use by others, and some static website for easy browsing of this information.

Just added jj support to my package manager ( github.com/alexpdp7/ubpkg ).

It took me a long time to finally switch from Subversion to Git. But once I did, I never looked back. It will likely take me another very long time to switch to jj, but installing it is a first step :-p

I have some doubts about jj's governance, but I'm crossing my fingers the situation improves.

oh no! Carmen Sandiego has stolen your: ability to resist posting a take about encrypted messengers

Perhaps it's time to use this last hour before dinner to fool around with making a Visidata video. I learned it has interesting JSON support recently.

Small milestone of github.com/alexpdp7/selfhostwa ; I have a deployment on my Kubernetes test host that scrapes daily the versions of YunoHost packages. The idea is to make it easy for people to assess how well updated systems like YunoHost are.

(For example, if you want to self-host Nextcloud, you could visit selfhostwatch, search for Nextcloud and view a timeline of updates across different self-hosting solutions.)

@zephyrfalcon I'm lately thinking that it's about making self-hosting easier. There's a ton of OSS feed readers, and there's stuff like YunoHost (and many others), but I feel nowadays it's harder for some reason for regular people to self-host. Many years ago I knew a lot of people who got shared hosting and ran Wordpress.

Nowadays, it feels that self-hosting your own blog for normal people is a fractal of complexity.