It certainly looks that way.
It certainly looks that way.
Yeah, that couch isn’t more than 3 meters, probably 2.5. I’d say it’s a 7 meter wide display.
There was a post a little while ago about svg cursors. Might be up your alley. I didn’t look into it too much.
Sounds like a lot of fun! work! Glad you’re having fun with it though.
Never used Kubernetes before, but really wanted to get into it with this new project. Project already has docker-compose. Found a converter to Kubernetes. Ran it and it mostly worked, but I had to dive into a week of reading the documentation and testing to get the rest of the way there.
I had a spark of glee seeing another fish shell user.
I used “job control” a lot but never called it that. And I mostly would background or foreground tasks. I didn’t know about a few of those additional commands talked about. Disown will be pretty handy.
Ooh, I like this one.
Yeah, bricking something makes it completely unusable anymore: ie. turned into nothing more than a brick. If you can access it and restore functionality then it wasn’t bricked.
I love these kinds of stories. Thanks for writing the follow up!
Holy shit that’s a great bot!
https://www.myinstants.com/en/instant/winamp-it-really-whips/
This was loaded in the winamp queue when you installed winamp. Take a listen.
https://audiobookbay.is/ works pretty well for me.
Ah whoops. No wonder my Ctrl + F5 never seemed to do anything.
Alright, giving it a shot now. Was getting frustrated with all the bloat Microsoft Swiftkey kept adding.
Wish you could see a preview when customizing the keyboard. Hard to do it blind.
I decided to give it a shot and it seems very nice. You’ve got to get a handle on the amount of resident memory it’s using though. I haven’t done anything other than set up some ssh connections and it’s using more RAM than most things on my computer. 242MB.
I’m a bioinformatician. The problem with using bioinformatics software here is that the input or output data size is huge for most tasks, which makes submitting jobs off site much more difficult.
Bacterial genome assembly isn’t too bad though. I use Nanopore sequencing data and the input is usually on the order of a few gigabytes per task for an output file of a few megabytes. (pulling numbers outta my butt, but shouldn’t be too far off) But the multiplying this by 48 or 96 which is the number of samples out machine can run all at the same time and you’re getting into hundreds of gigabytes for input data. It’s just tough to manage this with cloud services.
But if you go simpler, you could offer a BLAST server. You just need to host your own database and accept queries. Not sure if you can split it into smaller tasks though. If you segment the main database your p-value results will change.
Yeah, I’m up for this. It sounds like it is time to get into Rust. Never done a reading club before and I haven’t heard about the main session. This would be Mondays at noon for me which works out pretty well. Would prefer just a regular schedule instead of an accelerated schedule though.
This doesn’t look like a “read a section of the book and talk about it during the meeting” type of book club. You’ll essentially read though the section that week and we’ll do exercises together? Is that the idea?
Ah, but you my friend are at risk of infringing on my patent. I’ve patented the alphabet.