@coriander we also made throwing stars out of dollar bills
@coriander kids these days don't learn any handicrafts!! (makeing things out of duct tape)
@coriander idk at least we were making clothes
@coriander or maybe gorilla tape, in a different way
@coriander i blame Duck Tape
@coriander why did it ever stop, duct tape is still good
@coriander
meat in water 🥱
meat in salty water 🤤
@coriander when this happens to me sometimes adding salt fixes
@aescling i haven't either lol
Stellar type but instead of terastallization it’s @aescling with all the vees
also Open Doors is a bad program with negative value⹀add over just plain archive.org Wayback Machine backups and does not in any way deserve the adjective “preservation”
@wallhackio speak of the devil and he shall appear: https://hachyderm.io/@pat/112216636273524747
@wallhackio two things:
• guy who makes rails (dhh) is a techbro with terrible opinions about a lot of things, including (imo) technical decisions regarding the direction of the platform
• rails is really good at enabling small teams to build a minimally viable product quickly, which is why i work with it daily and why it is everywhere in library technology (lots of small underresourced teams in library tech). this is, more or less, good. however it also means it is often the framework of choice for ethically dubious startups trying to get some quick investor cash, which is not good. i want my code to benefit other libraries, but i don't want to do free work for the ethically-dubious startups
@gaditb i think there is a categorical difference between a set of instructions on a page and the actual enactment of those instructions. i view “infrastructure” as perhaps everything EXCEPT the instructions themselves which allows the execution to take place; i think lumping the instructions (an abstract product of human knowledge) in with all the things which actually are processing and doing and performing the execution is a mistake. but to be clear, this is referring to computer code as intellectual product, not computer code as bits on a disk. likewise, the information in a database is not infrastructure; the actual physical database that you can query and perform tasks on is
this distinction is necessary because the intellectual property of computer code (or database information) is not the only requirement to having an actual usable infrastructural piece. for databases, you need to have a computer which can store database entries, for one. then you need to actually load the database entries into the database. you need to connect it in such a way that it can be queried. only after you have done these tangible steps do you have a database-as-infrastructure. just the information, without performing those steps, is no more infrastructure than a cookbook is grocery
or, you might need recipes to make good food, but you also need ingredients. you need code to execute tasks on a computer, but you also need something to load the code onto and something to execute it. when i say “infrastructure”, i mean the latter items, because code which is not loaded onto anything or executable by anything is not actually a usable computer program. or, for that matter, meaningfully distinguishable from any other output of human intellectual pursuit, e.g. books
(if your argument is that all human knowledge is infrastructure i feel like you are severely weakening the utility of thw term)
@aschmitz i wish all the pretty okay people who used rails would get together and fork rails
i know this won't happen but i wish it
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