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  1. @fgraf

    Yes, indeed. @Johns_priv also brought this up, to which I replied here:

    social.coop/@smallcircles/1165

    What the discussions to the poll shows is that there is so much nuance, and numerous communication use cases and edge cases.

    And in the call to "join the fediverse" and plug in to the wire there is high risk that this nuance is not properly addressed, or is even unaddressible by the general approach that is followed. It is not "been there, done that, copy mastodon, bolt on feature". That organic chaotic growth does not have a naturally healthy outcome. It can grow the blob too.

    That is more or less the key point of my blog post on Grassroots fediverse evolution: that there is a sweet spot to be found between spontaneous grassroots emergence and orchestrated top-down standardization and guidance.

    coding.social/blog/grassroots-

    #SX has a focus on the prosocial design patterns that underly all the various online communication modes, and these can be defined in a tech-independent manner.

    #sx
  2. @fgraf

    Yes, indeed. @Johns_priv also brought this up, to which I replied here:

    social.coop/@smallcircles/1165

    What the discussions to the poll shows is that there is so much nuance, and numerous communication use cases and edge cases.

    And in the call to "join the fediverse" and plug in to the wire there is high risk that this nuance is not properly addressed, or is even unaddressible by the general approach that is followed. It is not "been there, done that, copy mastodon, bolt on feature". That organic chaotic growth does not have a naturally healthy outcome. It can grow the blob too.

    That is more or less the key point of my blog post on Grassroots fediverse evolution: that there is a sweet spot to be found between spontaneous grassroots emergence and orchestrated top-down standardization and guidance.

    coding.social/blog/grassroots-

    #SX has a focus on the prosocial design patterns that underly all the various online communication modes, and these can be defined in a tech-independent manner.

    #sx
  3. @fgraf

    Yes, indeed. @Johns_priv also brought this up, to which I replied here:

    social.coop/@smallcircles/1165

    What the discussions to the poll shows is that there is so much nuance, and numerous communication use cases and edge cases.

    And in the call to "join the fediverse" and plug in to the wire there is high risk that this nuance is not properly addressed, or is even unaddressible by the general approach that is followed. It is not "been there, done that, copy mastodon, bolt on feature". That organic chaotic growth does not have a naturally healthy outcome. It can grow the blob too.

    That is more or less the key point of my blog post on Grassroots fediverse evolution: that there is a sweet spot to be found between spontaneous grassroots emergence and orchestrated top-down standardization and guidance.

    coding.social/blog/grassroots-

    #SX has a focus on the prosocial design patterns that underly all the various online communication modes, and these can be defined in a tech-independent manner.

    #sx
  4. @fgraf

    Yes, indeed. @Johns_priv also brought this up, to which I replied here:

    social.coop/@smallcircles/1165

    What the discussions to the poll shows is that there is so much nuance, and numerous communication use cases and edge cases.

    And in the call to "join the fediverse" and plug in to the wire there is high risk that this nuance is not properly addressed, or is even unaddressible by the general approach that is followed. It is not "been there, done that, copy mastodon, bolt on feature". That organic chaotic growth does not have a naturally healthy outcome. It can grow the blob too.

    That is more or less the key point of my blog post on Grassroots fediverse evolution: that there is a sweet spot to be found between spontaneous grassroots emergence and orchestrated top-down standardization and guidance.

    coding.social/blog/grassroots-

    #SX has a focus on the prosocial design patterns that underly all the various online communication modes, and these can be defined in a tech-independent manner.

    #sx
  5. @fgraf

    Yes, indeed. @Johns_priv also brought this up, to which I replied here:

    social.coop/@smallcircles/1165

    What the discussions to the poll shows is that there is so much nuance, and numerous communication use cases and edge cases.

    And in the call to "join the fediverse" and plug in to the wire there is high risk that this nuance is not properly addressed, or is even unaddressible by the general approach that is followed. It is not "been there, done that, copy mastodon, bolt on feature". That organic chaotic growth does not have a naturally healthy outcome. It can grow the blob too.

    That is more or less the key point of my blog post on Grassroots fediverse evolution: that there is a sweet spot to be found between spontaneous grassroots emergence and orchestrated top-down standardization and guidance.

    coding.social/blog/grassroots-

    #SX has a focus on the prosocial design patterns that underly all the various online communication modes, and these can be defined in a tech-independent manner.

    #sx
  6. @fgraf maybe just ignore everything scam factory that is #a16z says about anything

  7. ☀ Unser zweites Terrassengespräch dieses Jahr steht an: meetup.com/hse-cluster-events/

    In zwei Wochen reden wir über schwieriges #Kulturerbe und wie es sinnvoll in der Schule vermittelt und diskutiert werden kann.

    📅 24.5., 18.00 Uhr

    🧭 in der Voßstraße 2 in Heidelberg

    👥 mit @[email protected], @[email protected] und Michelle König vom Auguste-Pattberg-Gymnasium Mosbach.

    ➡ Alle sind herzlich eingeladen!

    #Postkolonialismus #Holocaust #Shoah #DarkHeritage #Lehrerbildung #AußerschulischeLernorte #FediLZ #Heidelberg

  8. Warum "die Deutschen" kein Interesse an haben?
    Weil ich es schlichtweg nicht brauche - insbesondere nicht, wenn ich noch mehr dafür zahlen soll.

  9. Was ich am immer echt cool finde, ist dass es nicht NUR Fachvorträge gibt.

    Wie der Vortrag von Jessica Rowe und Miriam Payne.

    > Die Geschichte von „Seas the Day” ist ein eindrucksvolles Beispiel für die Kraft einer positiven inneren Haltung und den unermüdlichen Willen, weiterzumachen. Das Duo möchte sein Publikum dazu inspirieren, sich den eigenen Herausforderungen zu stellen und die nahezu grenzenlosen Möglichkeiten zu entdecken, die jenseits der eigenen Komfortzone liegen.

    Definitiv nichts was ich selber machen möchte. Aber schon cool zu hören.

    seasthedayoceanrowing.com/

  10. * Wo wohnst du? Wielange brauchst du ins Büro? 1h?
    * Tür zu Schreibtisch 1:45h
    * Mhm ... -... - MOMENT .. EINFACH?!
    * 👍

    Jedes - mal - dieselbe Reaktion.

  11. Drei Fragen und Antworten: Wann sich KI-Coding wirklich rechnet | heise online

    heise.de/news/Drei-Fragen-und-

    > Diskussionen um Coding mit KI drehen sich häufig um Anekdoten, selten um Kostenschätzungen. Ein Blick darauf, wie man solche Projekte überschlagen kann.

    Lustig, dass das gerade im feed kommt 😀

  12. Ein Tag Tng ist schon beeindruckend. Wo man sein kann, was zu welchem Aufwand möglich ist. Und vorallem die vielen Gespräche.

    Beherrschendes Thema war natürlich, wohin uns (IT ler) führt.

  13. 2 Million Dollars worth of code for $20,000: Rewriting large software projects with AI agents

    "prioritising throughput over safety" 😳

    bigtechday.com/vortraege#1ckBb

  14. As I just recommended the book today to a colleague as well. I really liked it:

    ebook.de/de/product/39352552/m

    Kill It with Fire chronicles the challenges of dealing with aging computer systems, along with sound modernization strategies. How to survive a legacy apocalypse

    #legacy #it #modernization

  15. As I just recommended the book today to a colleague as well. I really liked it:

    ebook.de/de/product/39352552/m

    Kill It with Fire chronicles the challenges of dealing with aging computer systems, along with sound modernization strategies. How to survive a legacy apocalypse

    #legacy #it #modernization

  16. As I just recommended the book today to a colleague as well. I really liked it:

    ebook.de/de/product/39352552/m

    Kill It with Fire chronicles the challenges of dealing with aging computer systems, along with sound modernization strategies. How to survive a legacy apocalypse

  17. As I just recommended the book today to a colleague as well. I really liked it:

    ebook.de/de/product/39352552/m

    Kill It with Fire chronicles the challenges of dealing with aging computer systems, along with sound modernization strategies. How to survive a legacy apocalypse

    #legacy #it #modernization

  18. What we learned using AI agents to refactor a monolith | 1Password

    1password.com/blog/what-we-lea

    > 1Password used AI agents to help refactor a massive codebase. The project taught us several lessons about where agents are useful and where they fall short at each stage of the process.

  19. What we learned using AI agents to refactor a monolith | 1Password

    1password.com/blog/what-we-lea

    > 1Password used AI agents to help refactor a massive codebase. The project taught us several lessons about where agents are useful and where they fall short at each stage of the process.

    #ai #genai #refactoring #softwareengineering

  20. What we learned using AI agents to refactor a monolith | 1Password

    1password.com/blog/what-we-lea

    > 1Password used AI agents to help refactor a massive codebase. The project taught us several lessons about where agents are useful and where they fall short at each stage of the process.

    #ai #genai #refactoring #softwareengineering