Excited to try this out.
Excited to try this out.
A presentation of our first plenary speaker at JuliaCon Local Paris 2025: Laura Grigori, Full Professor of Applied and Computational Mathematics at EPFL. She will be giving a keynote entitled "Randomization for solving high-dimensional problems: algorithms and software". The conference will take place on October 2nd and 3rd at Conservatoire national des arts et métiers, see the website https://juliacon.org/local/paris2025/ for more information!
Want more open-source software and scientific computing in your life? Get your ticket for JuliaCon Local Paris 2025 before the end of the early bird pricing!
We have an impressive lineup of keynotes, starting with Professor Laura Grigori (EPFL) and not stopping there!
juliacon.org/local/paris2...
Want to participate in #TidyTuesday but #julialang is more your speed? Check out #TidierTuesday!
github.com/TidierOrg/Ti...
Big shout out to @jonthegeek.com , @frankiethull.bsky.social , and the folks behind @tidierjl.bsky.social for their work making this happen.
Congratulations Botswana! A significant first step into this arena.
Overall, I'm bullish on jj, and would've adopted it right away if:
I was in an earlier stage of my git journey (eg. if I needed ohshitgit.com)
or
I had to work with conflicts or complex history rewrites more often (eg. every other day instead of week or month)
For now, I'm giving Sapling VCS a try.
-7. Bookmarks appear too subdued visually and in general feel awkwardly integrated, the UI workflow could be better here.
And I really hope `push -c @` doesn't become common: branch names in PRs/MRs are a small but useful signal. Making them all `push-xoanfcah` makes for a worse repo experience.
-5. it can't use your ssh config, so if you have multiple keypairs, ssh-agent seems your only option
-6. the docs can be just as inscrutable as git's documentation a lot of the times
-3.1. Other small inconsistencies like: `jj new xy` instead of `jj new -r xy`. Both work, but the former seems much more common
-4. Signs of immaturity: unavoidable issue in WSL on Windows filesystem because of no core.fileMode option (no real workaround, a PR has been in the works for a while)
+3. The UI wins in visual presentation too, great use of colours and Unicode graphics
-3. Not as consistent as I'd like it to be though: the "automagic" empty commits created for the sake of squash workflows makes things unpredictable sometimes, eg. `prev` moving back two commits instead of one
+2. `jj undo` by itself almost made me a convert
-2. Kinda obvious, but: as a new tool, support in editors and other tools is much much lower
+1. I hope jj takes off because it exposes its repo model much better with its UI than git does, would have saved me the hours of time and effort and frustration before I got git's model.
-1. Having understood git's model now though, jj doesn't offer me as huge a benefit as it would've otherwise
Ok, I tried out the jj (jujutsu) version control system, read through v5.chriskrycho.com/essays/jj-in... and worked my way through steveklabnik.github.io/jujutsu-tuto... . Writing down my thoughts here: ⬇️
It's the "non-following" part that seems bothersome to me. Updating the bookmark manually seems like an extra bit of busywork to do before every push, for not much gain.
But I'll try it out and see how it actually feels in practice, I'm partway through Steve Klabnik's jj tutorial now.
Point 2 is a common, frustrating hurdle for new tools to overcome:
"I'm aware old tool Jank has holes and rocky bits, but I've used duck tape and add-on tools to make it work well for me. Now any new tool Shiny has to be better than the whole - wonky, but working - system, not just Jank alone".
First impressions:
1. jj is a better tool than git CLI by itself
2. compared to my current git+aliases+lazygit workflow:
a. conflict handling maybe jj's biggest advantage
b. interop with forges maybe its biggest issue
3. anonymous non-following branches seem the weirdest bit, but weird ≠ bad
You should learn #JuliaLang because it’s fun
@steamdb.info please add a Storage Space criterion to the Search page! that's one of the first things I wanna filter on these days, given that every game wants to take up 20+ GB of space!
Happy New Year and all the very best for 2025! I hope it will be a year full of health, happiness, beauty and playfulness for you! 🎉🥂🍾✨🥳😊
#photography #nature #naturephotography #bluesky #mammals #wildlife #wildlifephotography #Happynewyear
Title: 401 காதல் கவிதைகள் (401 Love Poems) Subtitle: குறுந்தொகை ஓர் எளிய அறிமுகம் (Kurunthokai: A Simple Introduction) Author: சுஜாதா (Sujatha)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
19/20
New Year celebrations are great and all, but it's when you press a hotkey to enter today's date and see "Jan 1, 2025" that it hits you, that you really are in a new year!
45^2 = (9 * 10 / 2)^2 (Given): (n * (n + 1) / 2)^2 = 1^3 + 2^3 + ... + n^3 (9 * 10 / 2)^2 = 1^3 + 2^3 + ... + 9^3
It quite possibly originated there; I'd imagine someone saw that and remembered the formula for the sum of cubes:
✨Happy New Years ✨
to more than 1/5th of world population - the biggest chunk of people ever that are experiencing 2025 at the same moment right now 🎉
Forgot to add alt text to the image, so here it is:
Title: The Power of Now
Subtitle: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment
Author: Eckhart Tolle
Background Description: A serene gradient of soft green and yellow hues, evoking a sense of calm and mindfulness.
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
18/20
Title: Mother of Learning Author: Domagoj Kurmaic (writing as nobody103) Cover Description: A mystical illustration featuring a young man with glowing blue energy swirling around his chest and hands, set against a background of intricate golden clockwork and Roman numeral clock faces, evoking themes of time and magic.
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
17/20
Title: The Fountainhead Author: Ayn Rand Cover Description: Abstract, Art Deco-style illustration featuring a muscular figure holding a glowing sphere with rays of light radiating outward, set against a backdrop of angular skyscrapers.
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
16/20
What feature? I didn't get what the incentive is.
பேய்க்கரும்பு English translation: Hollow sugarcane author: பாலகுமாரன் (Balakumaran)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
15/20
Guns, Germs, and Steel subtitle: The Fates of Human Societies author: Jared Diamond
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
14/20
Ender's Game The Nebula and Hugo award winning novel Orson Scott Card (Author)
Orson Scott Card (Author) Children of the Mind
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers."
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
#Books
13/20