Davy_Jones

joined 2 years ago
[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com -2 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago) (1 children)

Atheism 1.45K users / month, Religion 9 users / month, religion isn't gonna fly on Lemmy. You may be as christian as you like but how many times have you been able to talk religion here. And the same goes for any topics that goes against the current group think.

[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com -5 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago) (11 children)

I still use Reddit for niche and polarizing topics. Lemmy feels like groupthink to me, especially about politics — it’s always “Ukraine good, Russia bad” and “Palestine good, Israel bad.” I like hearing both sides, but divergent opinions get smothered here. Imagine an average Christian joining the Fediverse: they’d have to leave many of their beliefs at the door and adapt to the herd, or risk being unwelcome, having posts downvoted to oblivion, and being told to leave. It’s already happened to me a few times with opinions that aren’t welcomed here. It’s a far cry from what Lemmy’s decentralization promised.

[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

I wish that was an option but mainstream media is the only way to get locally relevant news as far as I know.

 

Imagine a TierMaker where everyone can rank the same things, and instead of just your personal list, it shows a combined “community consensus.” Would be interesting to see how the internet as a whole ranks thinks.

 

The other day I turned on the radio and the host was giving what sounded like a sermon about “growth” and how everyone loves it because it improves life quality and makes things cheaper. I already avoid mainstream news because it’s all one-sided and shallow, but now I’m getting sermons too.

Is there any way to listen to radio content filtered by topics I actually want, without having to manually build a playlist every day? Maybe podcasts or a feed aggregator plus with TTS to read it in real time?

[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

And with instances blocking each other it may be in an instance I can't see from this one.

Right now I can see the posts I have already interacted with, for a moment I thought it would be that.

Nah, it didn't say anything about perplexity it just felt like that to me. It uses Ollama and some of the LLM services from companies but I saw it on an image, and I don't remember what the title was.

Doesn't sound familiar. I think it had the word sense in it but I couldn't find it using that word.

 

I saw a post earlier about a local alternative to Perplexity (an agentic LLM + search), but now I can’t find it. Does anyone know the best way to track down posts like this?

Also, is there any community where you can ask for help searching posts on the Fediverse, or is nostupidquestions fine for that?

I really wish posts were properly organized using tags. Finding stuff would be so much easier.

 

I’ve been wondering—why don’t we have an AI model that can take any piece of music, compress it into a super small “musical script” with parameters, and then generate it back so it sounds almost identical to the original? Kind of like MIDI or sheet music but way more detailed, capturing all the nuances. With modern AI, it seems like this should be possible. Is it a technical limitation, or are we just not thinking about it?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/55628224

I’ve been thinking about discovering underappreciated Lemmy instances. GitHub’s awesome-lemmy-instances used to serve a similar purpose, but it hasn’t been updated in a long time, and I haven’t found anything else like it.

I got the idea from this post about finding decentralized communities in the Fediverse. I’m thinking of a Lemmy bot that tracks Lemmy instances, calculates the average number of active users and standard deviation, and identifies instances with activity below the average plus two standard deviations. It would then rank these underutilized instances by performance metrics like uptime and response time, and periodically update a curated list on Lemmy to guide users toward instances that could use more participation.

I'd love feedback on how you would go about doing something like this. And specifically how to rank by performance.

 

I’ve been thinking about discovering underappreciated Lemmy instances. GitHub’s awesome-lemmy-instances used to serve a similar purpose, but it hasn’t been updated in a long time, and I haven’t found anything else like it.

I got the idea from this post about finding decentralized communities in the Fediverse. I’m thinking of a Lemmy bot that tracks Lemmy instances, calculates the average number of active users and standard deviation, and identifies instances with activity below the average plus two standard deviations. It would then rank these underutilized instances by performance metrics like uptime and response time, and periodically update a curated list on Lemmy to guide users toward instances that could use more participation.

I'd love feedback on how you would go about doing something like this. And specifically how to rank by performance.

Browsing not choosing. I didn't say I would necessarily swap, just that I like to see other options.

 

Whenever I subscribe to a small but very active community, for example lefty_news@ibbit.at, my Scaled sort feed gets flooded almost entirely by posts from that one community. I thought Scaled sort was supposed to highlight outliers across all communities to prevent a single instance from dominating the feed. Is this a bug or just how it's supposed to work?

 

Today I discovered the Fediverse Software Database, and it’s a bit disheartening to see how many platforms have so few users. What are some ways we could help promote these smaller or newer Fediverse projects and give them more visibility?

 

I'm looking for an up-to-date, comprehensive list of all ActivityPub federated platforms, sorted by the total number of monthly active users across all instances. Similar to Fediverse Observer’s list but for platforms instead of instances using the platform. Does anyone know of one?

[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 days ago

Thanks, that's what I was looking for. Seems weird that a client I haven't heard about has the feature but the other more used clients don't.

[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 days ago

Summary of A Philosophy of Software Design by John Ousterhout Source: danlebrero.com

These are notes by Daniel Lebrero Berna on John Ousterhout’s A Philosophy of Software Design.

Some advice in the book goes against the current software dogma. The current dogma is the result of previous pains, but has now been taken to the extreme, causing new pains.

What the author solves with “Comment-First Development,” others solve with Test-Driven Development. The excuses for not writing comments mirror those for not writing tests.


Key Insights

  • It’s easier to see design problems in someone else’s code than your own.
  • Total complexity = Σ(complexity of part × time spent on that part).
  • Goal of good design: make the system obvious.
  • Complexity accumulates incrementally, making it hard to remove. Adopt a “zero tolerance” philosophy.
  • Better modules: interface much simpler than implementation (Deep modules).
  • Design modules around required knowledge, not task order.
  • Adjacent layers with similar abstractions are a red flag.
  • Prioritize simple interfaces over simple implementations.
  • Each method should do one thing and do it completely.
  • Long methods are fine if the signature is simple and the code easy to read.
  • Difficulty naming a method may indicate unclear design.
  • Comments should add precision or intuition.
  • If you aren’t improving the design when changing code, you’re probably making it worse.
  • Comments belong in the code, not commit logs.
  • Poor designers spend most of their time chasing bugs in brittle code.

Preface

  • The most fundamental problem in computer science is problem decomposition.
  • The book is an opinion piece.
  • The goal: reduce complexity.

1. Introduction (It’s All About Complexity)

  • Fight complexity by simplifying and encapsulating it in modules.
  • Software design is never finished.
  • Design flaws are easier to see in others’ code.

2. The Nature of Complexity

  • Complexity = what makes code hard to understand or modify.
  • Total complexity depends on time spent in each part.
  • Complexity is more obvious to readers than writers.
  • Symptoms: change amplification, cognitive load, unknown unknowns.
  • Causes: dependencies, obscurity.
  • Complexity accumulates incrementally; remove it aggressively.

3. Working Code Isn’t Enough

  • Distinguish tactical (short-term) from strategic (long-term) programming.
  • The “tactical tornado” writes lots of code fast but increases complexity.

4. Modules Should Be Deep

  • A module = interface + implementation.
  • Deep modules have simple interfaces, complex implementations.
  • Interface = what clients must know (formal + informal).
  • Avoid “classitis”: too many small classes increase system complexity.
  • Interfaces should make the common case simple.

5. Information Hiding (and Leakage)

  • Information hiding is key to deep modules.
  • Avoid temporal decomposition (ordering-based design).
  • Larger classes can improve information hiding.

6. General-Purpose Modules Are Deeper

  • Make modules somewhat general-purpose.

  • Implementation fits current needs; interface supports future reuse.

  • Questions to balance generality:

    • What is the simplest interface covering current needs?
    • How many times will it be used?
    • Is the API simple for current use? If not, it’s too general.

7. Different Layer, Different Abstraction

  • Adjacent layers with similar abstractions are a red flag.
  • Pass-through methods and variables add no value.
  • Fix pass-throughs by grouping related data or using shared/context objects.

8. Pull Complexity Downwards

  • Prefer simple interfaces over simple implementations.
  • Push complexity into lower layers.
  • Avoid configuration parameters; compute reasonable defaults automatically.

9. Better Together or Better Apart?

  • Combine elements when they:

    • Share information.
    • Are used together.
    • Overlap conceptually.
    • Simplify interfaces or eliminate duplication.
  • Developers often split methods too much.

  • Methods can be long if they are cohesive and clear.

  • Red flag: one component requires understanding another’s implementation.

10. Define Errors Out of Existence

  • Exception handling increases complexity.

  • Reduce exception points by:

    • Designing APIs that eliminate exceptional cases.
    • Handling exceptions at low levels.
    • Aggregating exceptions into a common type.
    • Crashing when appropriate.

11. Design It Twice

  • Explore at least two radically different designs before choosing.

12. Why Write Comments? The Four Excuses

  • Writing comments improves design and can be enjoyable.

  • Excuses:

    • “Good code is self-documenting.” False.
    • “No time to write comments.” It’s an investment.
    • “Comments get outdated.” Update them.
    • “Comments are worthless.” Learn to write better ones.

13. Comments Should Describe Things That Aren’t Obvious

  • Comments should add precision and intuition.
  • Document both interface and implementation.

14. Choosing Names

  • Names should be precise and consistent.
  • If naming is hard, the design likely isn’t clean.

15. Write the Comment First

  • Like TDD, comment-first helps design, pacing, and clarity.

16. Modifying Existing Code

  • Always improve design when changing code.
  • Comments belong in code, not commit logs.

17. Consistency

  • Don’t “improve” existing conventions without strong reason.

19. Software Trends

  • Agile and TDD often promote tactical programming.

20. Designing for Performance

  • Simpler code tends to be faster.
  • Design around the critical path.

21. Conclusion

  • Poor designers spend their time debugging brittle systems.
[–] Davy_Jones@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Summary of Clean Code by Robert C. Martin
Source: gist.github.com/wojteklu

Code is clean if it can be understood easily – by everyone on the team. Clean code can be read and enhanced by a developer other than its original author. With understandability comes readability, changeability, extensibility, and maintainability.


General rules

  1. Follow standard conventions.
  2. Keep it simple stupid. Simpler is always better. Reduce complexity as much as possible.
  3. Boy scout rule. Leave the campground cleaner than you found it.
  4. Always find root cause. Always look for the root cause of a problem.

Design rules

  1. Keep configurable data at high levels.
  2. Prefer polymorphism to if/else or switch/case.
  3. Separate multi-threading code.
  4. Prevent over-configurability.
  5. Use dependency injection.
  6. Follow Law of Demeter. A class should know only its direct dependencies.

Understandability tips

  1. Be consistent. If you do something a certain way, do all similar things in the same way.
  2. Use explanatory variables.
  3. Encapsulate boundary conditions. Boundary conditions are hard to keep track of. Put the processing for them in one place.
  4. Prefer dedicated value objects to primitive type.
  5. Avoid logical dependency. Don't write methods which work correctly depending on something else in the same class.
  6. Avoid negative conditionals.

Names rules

  1. Choose descriptive and unambiguous names.
  2. Make meaningful distinction.
  3. Use pronounceable names.
  4. Use searchable names.
  5. Replace magic numbers with named constants.
  6. Avoid encodings. Don't append prefixes or type information.

Functions rules

  1. Small.
  2. Do one thing.
  3. Use descriptive names.
  4. Prefer fewer arguments.
  5. Have no side effects.
  6. Don't use flag arguments. Split method into several independent methods that can be called from the client without the flag.

Comments rules

  1. Always try to explain yourself in code.
  2. Don't be redundant.
  3. Don't add obvious noise.
  4. Don't use closing brace comments.
  5. Don't comment out code. Just remove.
  6. Use as explanation of intent.
  7. Use as clarification of code.
  8. Use as warning of consequences.

Source code structure

  1. Separate concepts vertically.
  2. Related code should appear vertically dense.
  3. Declare variables close to their usage.
  4. Dependent functions should be close.
  5. Similar functions should be close.
  6. Place functions in the downward direction.
  7. Keep lines short.
  8. Don't use horizontal alignment.
  9. Use white space to associate related things and disassociate weakly related.
  10. Don't break indentation.

Objects and data structures

  1. Hide internal structure.
  2. Prefer data structures.
  3. Avoid hybrids structures (half object and half data).
  4. Should be small.
  5. Do one thing.
  6. Small number of instance variables.
  7. Base class should know nothing about their derivatives.
  8. Better to have many functions than to pass some code into a function to select a behavior.
  9. Prefer non-static methods to static methods.

Tests

  1. One assert per test.
  2. Readable.
  3. Fast.
  4. Independent.
  5. Repeatable.

Code smells

  1. Rigidity. The software is difficult to change. A small change causes a cascade of subsequent changes.
  2. Fragility. The software breaks in many places due to a single change.
  3. Immobility. You cannot reuse parts of the code in other projects because of involved risks and high effort.
  4. Needless Complexity.
  5. Needless Repetition.
  6. Opacity. The code is hard to understand.
 

I often use pkgstats to check the popularity of Arch packages I use. Sometimes I notice a package is declining in popularity, and I’d like to find similar alternatives that are trending instead. Something like https://pkgstats.archlinux.de/fun

Are there any sites that categorize Linux software and show popularity within each category, so it’s easier to discover alternatives?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/55547080

I’ve just found out that some Lemmy web interfaces let you sign in with multiple accounts and switch between them easily. Is there any client that can show notifications from all accounts at the same time, so I don’t need to switch back and forth?

I’ve checked out Voyager, Photon, Alexandrite, and Tesseract. They all seem quite similar to me. Which one would you recommend?

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