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Aren't RSS feeds a pull mechanism for end users? With social media, it ends up acting like a push to the user so that they get notifications in "near-realtime", which would be important for events like flash floods.


There are a number of services that will do push notifications for RSS feed changes. Agencies could use one of them.


"There's no browser version of the app. Anytype is a stand-alone software, that works on desktop or mobile devices. There are many points of vulnerability in-browser apps that would compromise our commitment to data security and encryption."

What does this even mean? How does having a mobile app mean more security than a web app?

Are they worried about browser extensions? Or is this just an excuse not to host on the web?


It's just a method definition using a globally defined symbol instead of your own method name which may clash with existing "dispose" implementations.

Agreed it's a little weird if you haven't been using variables as method names before though.


Reminds me of a little vscode extension I wrote for myself to integrate ChatGPT into my projects. I didn't do a great job with documentation, but you can reference other files within comments to send them as context. So something like

/* Write tests for [xyz/(./xyz.ts) using [abc tests](./abc.spec.ts) as an example to reference

@ChatGPT */

Reference: https://github.com/CapsuleCat/sora-by-capsule-cat

I'll have to check out how your version pulls in the project as context.


Did you actually use "ChatGPT" i.e. chat.openai.com, or one of the OpenAI's API? These are not exactly the same.


Thankfully these cats do not exist. I'm just seeing nightmare floofs.


I usually just use terraform to deploy to AWS with some additional scripts to rsync files from the CI/CD pipeline.

At this point I just have a template to do it and reuse it in my various projects.

If I don't need a server, I usually just use the Serverless framework.


Can you please explain how/why terraform is used?


Does the name have any special meaning?


It means “evaluate”, but in the sense of evaluating a piece of artwork, so my guess is that the author justed ran the word through Google Translate.


According to this[1] okwave thread (in Japanese) it is used in mathematics literature but generally as a direct translation from English. There is an argument there, saying that the nuance of Hyouka in Japanese mathematics is more appropriate in cases where a specific value is harder to determine and as such is used more often for things like "inequality evaluation".

[1]: https://okwave.jp/qa/q5812331.html


you got me there :)


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyouka came to mind, but it has a long vowel (ou) the post is missing.


I Scream


Thanks, I could not find this link when I logged into the app. I would have assumed this option would be under the profile page.


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