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Chris​‌​‬ Hayes‌​​​

  1. For-Profit (Creative) Software
    - A labor of love about the state of 3D tools and software pricing—peppered with some (creative).

    youtube.com/watch?v=I4mdMMu-3fc

  2. As a resident usually you only hear about and when it comes to basketball, so I was surprised to learn that Fairfield just made one of the best buzzer beaters in college basketball.

    youtube.com/watch?v=xGqwKfnaAgo

  3. Gotta say I'm happy with my current TODO list setup.

    @nextcloud server hosts it. I use @planifyapp on Ubuntu and on Android.

  4. I gotta say as a frontend dev, Builder.io is killing it in the CMS game right now. They're doing everything a headless drag-drop CMS should be.

  5. Vercel's "prompt -> code" entered alpha (v0.dev).
    Builder just announced their ai "figma -> builder.io" tool (velocity.builder.io).

    In relation to my prev post, really weird timing that bifrost.so's "figma -> tailwind/chakra" tool was abandoned.

  6. After its month-long hiatus. AI Seinfeld, "Nothing Forever", is back.
    The realtime AI-generated episodes start in 10min. twitch.tv/watchmeforever

  7. RunwayML has begun closed beta.
    Initial impressions are you can achieve really impressive results with the right video/image inputs, and conversely without the right inputs it can be a nonsensical mess.
    Luckily, this isn't Stable Diffusion where you need to learn the prompt language (Though you can write prompts). Using tricks like input videos of untextured 3D scenes can get really impressive results. Image textures in the input also work well.
    peertube.linuxrocks.online/w/v

  8. Well written blog from Denis Pushkarev about the state of core-js (yes, the "looking for a good job" guy), and his situation as a FOSS maintainer. It's easy to make fun of the core-js output, but it's important to understand where he's coming from and how little core-js gets for being used on 500+ of the Top 1000 websites. Longer blog, but definitely worth a read.
    github.com/zloirock/core-js/bl

  9. There's a joke that software dev is like solving a crime, and you're the murderer.
    And yet, here I am trying to figure out why PHP was murdered by "The OOM Killer"