sorted by: new top controversial old
[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org -2 points 2 days ago

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_life_expectancy

Nope, 65th place, slightly behind the US and the country of old men: Albania.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 17 points 2 days ago

And a whole lot of content that I frankly would have preferred not to have seen.

When you're 12 and your parents have no idea what you're doing, you'll end up in very dark corners.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org -5 points 2 days ago

It's the same in China.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 2 points 3 days ago

And who does that?

I think you don't really get my point. I'm not arguing that there are no ways to archive data. I'm arguing that there are no technologies available for average Joe.

It is hardly a good strategy to basically set up half a datacenter at home.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 4 points 3 days ago

Thin concrete slabs are extremely brittle.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 15 points 3 days ago

Is it? It's rather expensive and would you really know, if the data is gone or corrupted?

You'd have to download every single file in certain intervals and check it. That's not really low complexity.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 20 points 3 days ago

But what actually is "archival"?

Like, what technology normal person has access to counts at least as enthusiast level archival?

Magnetic tape, optical media, flash, HDD all rot away, potentially within frighteningly short timeframes and often with subtle bitrot.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 8 points 4 days ago

And when people started writing books instead of memorizing epic poems.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 29 points 6 days ago

And just about 5 of them have the same capacity as an iPhone battery. Absolutely insane.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 5 points 1 week ago

If some bot reacts to this comment, you'll make the developer very unhappy.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 12 points 1 week ago

What's really baffling to me is how completely irrelevant most ads are to me.

And I'm not saying "ads don't work for me", I get ads for products that I will never buy. I'm a man and YouTube recommends me tampons, lipstick and perfume. I also won't buy a car anytime soon, yet I get tons of ads for cars.

Even in the mindset of an ad person, that can't make sense. Sure, there is the off chance that I'll buy lipstick for my girlfriend, but how likely is that and how much revenue will materialize from bombarding thousands of men with ads? That cannot be economically viable.

The actually infuriating part is, that we're still paying for it. And the vendors as well. Only Google profits. If a company spends more on ads than necessary, their products will get more expensive, and those who buy their products will have to pay for it. So essentially I'm paying money for being advertised to, so Google can rake in billions.

[-] leisesprecher@feddit.org 10 points 1 week ago

Had to work with a fixed string format years ago. Absolute hell.

Something like 200 variables, all encoded in fixed length strings concatenated together. The output was the same.

...and some genius before me used + instead of stringbuilders or anything dignified, so it ran about as good as lt. Dan.

37

I have a small homelab running a few services, some written by myself for small tasks - so the load is basically just me a few times a day.

Now, I'm a Java developer during the day, so I'm relatively productive with it and used some of these apps as learning opportunities (balls to my own wall overengineering to try out a new framework or something).

Problem is, each app uses something like 200mb of memory while doing next to nothing. That seems excessive. Native images dropped that to ~70mb, but that needs a bunch of resources to build.

So my question is, what is you go-to for such cases?

My current candidates are Python/FastAPI, Rust and Elixir, but I'm open for anything at this point - even if it's just for learning new languages.

view more: next ›

leisesprecher

joined 1 month ago