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Hexbear Code-Op (hexbear.net)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by RedWizard@hexbear.net to c/technology@hexbear.net
 
 

Where to find the Code-Op

Wow, thanks for the stickies! Love all the activity in this thread. I love our coding comrades!


Hey fellow Hexbearions! I have no idea what I'm doing! However, born out of the conversations in the comments of this little thing I posted the other day, I have created an org on GitHub that I think we can use to share, highlight, and collaborate on code and projects from comrades here and abroad.

  • I know we have several bots that float around this instance, and I've always wondered who maintains them and where their code is hosted. It would be cool to keep a fork of those bots in this org, for example.
  • I've already added a fork of @WhyEssEff@hexbear.net's Emoji repo as another example.
  • The projects don't need to be Hexbear or Lemmy related, either. I've moved my aPC-Json repo into the org just as an example, and intend to use the code written by @invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net to play around with adding ICS files to the repo.
  • We have numerous comrades looking at mainlining some flavor of Linux and bailing on windows, maybe we could create some collaborative documentation that helps onboard the Linux-curious.
  • I've been thinking a lot recently about leftist communication online and building community spaces, which will ultimately intersect with self-hosting. Documenting various tools and providing Docker Compose files to easily get people off and running could be useful.

I don't know a lot about GitHub Orgs, so I should get on that, I guess. That said, I'm open to all suggestions and input on how best to use this space I've created.

Also, I made (what I think is) a neat emblem for the whole thing:

Todos

  • Mirror repos to both GitHub and Codeberg
  • Create process for adding new repos to the mirror process
  • Create a more detailed profile README on GitHub.

Done

spoiler

  • ~~Recover from whatever this sickness is the dang kids gave me from daycare.~~
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Investing in a server with mass storage would "pay for itself" in less than a year, compared to what I'm currently renting (I'm low key scared to look up the prices of DDR5 RAM and NVMe drives though). Since I plan to maintain TankieTube "forever", it seems like the best option.

I'm so ready to ditch BackBlaze because their timeout errors are causing ~90% of the current problems with the website (external storage move failures and buffering problems). mario-finger

I have plenty of experience assembling computers and the thought of building a server is really fun, but I've never used colocation before.

Questions/Thoughts/Concerns:


  1. Do datacenters let you walk inside to maintain your own server? There is a datacenter in my home city, which would be convenient, but using it would effectively soft-doxx my location. Right now "Burgerland" is as specific as I publicly reveal.

  1. If I ship the server to a more remote location, how would I replace failed drives? Is that a commonly provided service? Would using a datacenter within ~2 hours driving distance be the best compromise between accessibility and location obfuscation?

  1. Is paying with Monero an option? Is it a good idea? Could I mail replacement drives directly to the datacenter without revealing my home return address?

It looks like I'll need NVMe drives in something called the U.2 form factor (instead of M.2) in order to enable hot swapping. TIL.

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This paper discovered the continuous math equivalent of the digital NAND gate. It turns out that a single binary operation paired with the constant 1 can generate every single standard elementary function. That operation is defined as eml(x,y)=exp(x)-ln(y). You can reconstruct constants like pi and the imaginary unit alongside basic addition and complex calculus tools using nothing but this one function.

The implications for machine learning and symbolic regression are massive. Normally when artificial intelligence tries to discover mathematical formulas from data it has to search through a chaotic space of different operators and syntax rules. Because the EML operator turns every mathematical expression into a uniform binary tree of identical nodes the search space becomes perfectly regular. You can basically treat a mathematical formula like a neural network circuit. The paper shows that when you train these EML trees using standard gradient optimizers like Adam the weights can actually snap to exact closed-form symbolic expressions instead of just giving fuzzy numerical approximations.

This finding could change how we design analog circuits and specialized computing hardware. If you only need a single instruction to execute any complex mathematical function you could build physical hardware or single instruction stack machines optimized purely for the EML operation. The fact that this was discovered by computationally stripping down a calculator rather than through purely theoretical derivation highlights how much structural beauty is still hiding in basic math.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/45946938

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Why are emerging economies rapidly choosing electrification over oil and gas?

In this interview, Markham Hislop speaks with Dan Walter of Ember Energy about a major shift underway in global energy systems. Across the global South, technologies like solar, electric vehicles, and heat pumps are no longer just climate solutions—they are often the cheapest and most practical energy options available.

The conversation explores how falling costs have triggered a tipping point, why decentralized energy (like balcony solar) is spreading, and how electrification is bypassing traditional grid constraints. It also examines the role of disruptive innovation, drawing on Clayton Christensen’s theory to explain how “good enough” technologies are reshaping entire energy systems.

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OpenAI leaders horrified staffers after proposing an “insane” plan to enrich the company by pitting world governments against each other.

This anecdote of near comic-book-villainry comes from The New Yorker’s sweeping new investigation into CEO Sam Altman, which documents his alarming pattern of lying and manipulating to build his AI empire, a behavior that some insiders likened to that of an actual “sociopath.”

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