[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

It’s lacking the huge community python has though.

And where did Rust, Python etc get their huge community from in the first place? From being jack of all trades? No, because they were the best fit for their use case. After they established themselves there, they became widely good.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago

Nim is not transpiled. Transpilation means translation between equal levels of abstraction. The C code generated by Nim is not something most people would do anything with.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago

I like Nim and many concepts of it with the big point of discussion being that function names get normalized (helloWorld === hello_world).

But I feel like that Nim is a language without purpose. It's all nice and cool on paper, but it has no use case where I think "I have to do it in Nim".

Go is known for making small, fast startup web apps, Python for making small one time tasks or Data work, Rust low level programming if you like functional programming, PHP if you want yo setup a website as fast as possible.

But Nim doesn't have this, it doesn't have a library that's better than in all other languages. It's nice but what for?

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The "microsoft rival", as it is called in the headline, is alfaview, a company that offers GDPR compliant video conferencing software.

And they complain that Teams gets bundled with Office by default which givea this an advantage over other (their) product.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Oh, I'm dumb. Thanks for clearing this up :)

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

I'm not so sure if the JVM startup was the culprit in your situation. The Computer Language Benchmarks Game shows that even for short runtimes, the startup doesn't affect their performance numbers that much

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

This is actually a very cool and insightful blog post. I'd have liked if the code was worked better into the written text however. I mean it didn't dive deep into it's Java usage or the specifics of the JVM, other than it being very well optimized for short lived objects.

However, the precise performance numbers should be taken with a grain of salt. I'd classify this as a micro benchmark and those can often be influenced by stuff like cache locality and other small details and could look quite different on other machines.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago

I only know of a handful of cases where branchless programming is actually being used. And those are really niche ones.

So no. The average programmer really doesn't need to use it, probably ever.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

If we randomly assume they were halfway down (no idea on where they actually were but as a blind guess 50% is a good starting point)

The wreck was found 500m away from the wreck of the Titanic, the Titan descends in a curve and not straight downwards, gives pretty good indication that they were near the depth of the ocean floor. Combine that with the fact that they descended faster than anticipated and that they lost communication right around the time they were supposed to reach the lowet point, I think they were close to the ocean floor.

But cautiously saying half is probably better.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 15 points 1 year ago

Apparently they learned a lot from r/subredditsimulator

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

I'm interested to see how AI training on reddit turns out. Especially the default subs are full of snarky jokes, even on serious topics the majority of comments are "funny" one liners. And those are the ones getting the most upvotes.

Compared to a system like StackOverflow where the upvoted answers are the most helpful and mostly well written and thoughtfully crafted.

[-] FriendOfFalcons@kbin.social 9 points 1 year ago

Reddit is really on their way to become the next facebook.

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FriendOfFalcons

joined 1 year ago