beto
I signed for a storage unit this week, and they require me to use an app to access the unit. Of course their servers were down when I first tried using the app. ๐คฆ
Feel free to create a community for Ableton there, or if you don't want to moderate it I'm happy to create it as well!
I launched lemmy.studio today, with the intent of hosting some music communities (music production, genres, different media, DAWs, etc.).
I work on Apache Superset for my day job, it's a BI tool for data exploration and visualization. It's a big project with 100+ committers, so a lot of the challenges are about managing people and communicating effectively.
DJ is a "metrics platform that allows users to define metrics and the data models behind them using SQL, serving as a semantic layer on top of a physical data warehouse." The project is still in its infancy but growing fast.
My favorite project is shillelagh, a Python library that lets you query APIs using SQL, eg:
SELECT *
FROM "https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1_rN3lm0R_bU3NemO0s9pbFkY5LQPcuy1pscv8ZXPtg8/edit#gid=0"
That was such an amazing read! Thanks for sharing that!
So many great memories!
I remember daydreaming about the day everyone would have an email address! It seemed so fat-fetched, the concept of meeting someone and exchanging email addresses. I had dial up for many years, and I also dreamed about having a permanent connection. I would think, "Imagine, you receive an email and you get notified in real time that it arrived! No need to dial up and fetch emails via POP3!"
In 1999 my parents got a dedicated connection via cable, so I set up a Linux server on their house. Back then the computer would get a real, unfiltered, IP address, so I started running my own email service. 24 years later and I still have the same domain and run my own mail service, though on the cloud these days.
A couple years ago there was a post going on Gemini asking How you were using the Internet in the 1991-1995 and 1995-2005? (sic), the replies are super interesting.
Black beans on the crock pot:
- 454g of dry black beans
- 1 onion, diced
- 1 teaspoon of garlic powder
- 4 bay leaves (big)
- 1 piece of dried kombu
- 2 carrots, sliced
Add everything to the crock pot, with 6 cups of water. Cook for 5 hours on high. Once it's done, add 2 teaspoons of salt and mix well.
I make this every Sunday, and eat throughout the week with fresh rice, salad, nuts, and some protein (tofu or soy in my case). It's delicious and nutritious.
In California we did the opposite. I used my wildfire N95 when COVID started...