In this case with the, I believe it’s called quantum tunneling by mullvad, it’s actually a good thing. Because the encapsulation protocol is just UDP/IP, a well established existing protocol that can masquerade as any kind of internet traffic easily.
No I haven’t but I think the lack of liquidity as a chicken and egg is a huge barrier to entry in these markets specifically. They are small right now but there are climate derivatives on the Chicago mercantile exchange so this isn’t a new concept I think.
I think it’s going to be targeting mostly stationary HA redundant uplinks. Backup for primary uplink or low usage primary link. In those scenarios pointing at your nearest antenna fixed is much better than an omnidirectional antenna.
Working on this problem but a combo of a skill and an mcp better suited to playwright is the solution IMO.
The issue is for many things playwright is really verbose, by better tailoring outputs and making them more fine grained you’ll get less context bloat and allow the llm to better work with the context. I’m making it open source.
Yes I'm actually not too fond of the DX of Deno. I don't know why. It's a perfectly fine runtime and the permissions are obviously great but the texture is off if that makes sense.
I always gravitate to Bun when I can, it feels light and fresh.
Also I'm definitely going to try out your project this weekend, I've been looking for something like this to put together a free college info aggregation site from the college's public sites themselves, like financial aid dates, on campus programs, etc..
Github actions buildx also going down is a really unintended consequence. It would be great if we could mirror away from docker entirely at this point but I digress.
Wow, this is the key. If it just had python that’s not as useful but the major frameworks is the real value. Definitely going to keep an eye on this. I built a sandbox with deno for ai code generation. It works well enough but there are some use cases where python may make more sense. Nice!
They could have also contributed to the effort. You can also add types to monaco typescript. I don’t see a need for a Deno specific LSP, am I missing something?
The biggest deal difference between the Deno LSP and Typescript sort-of-LSP in my experience is around the import model. Typescript has a bunch of "module resolution" modes based on various combinations of browser, bundler, and/or Node. For various reasons the Deno LSP is the only encoding of the Deno "module resolution' and upstream Typescript doesn't have a "denoX" set of "module resolution" options.
The second biggest deal is that the Deno LSP also includes a full linter, versus for the full experience the Typescript not-quite-LSP is often paired with the ESLint VS Code extension and a large eslint install.
Deno's LSP is also sometimes preferred for being a single Rust binary that runs quicker than Typescript's not-quite-LSP (plus or minus ESLint's non-LSP). It may be interesting to see how Golang Typescript's real-LSP fares in comparison in a future version.
Ah interesting, Yes i see what you’re saying regarding eslint and didn’t consider that. I’m a big of newer linters with better perf but none match the depth currently with eslint. Will keep an eye out on deno lsp!
Unfortunately most of the CPUC worked at PGE, the people that understand energy regulation are usually energy folks. And so the CPUC is typically quite understanding of PG&E’s pleas, they approved every single rate hike they’ve proposed. 5 times last year alone.
Makes it difficult to block by censors. Great video I saw here: https://youtu.be/pZiG8r-diTM?si=wy35elqMt1T6euq0
This also means wg is just doing one thing instead of a dozen it doesn’t “need” to.
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