this is really cool and I'd love to use it, but it seems they only support workers written in Go if I'm not mistaken? My workers can be remote and not using Go, behind a NAT too. I want a them to periodically pull the queue, this way I do not need to worry about network topology. I guess I could simply interface with PG atomically via a simple API endpoint for the workers to connect, but I'd love to have the UI of riverqueue.
I gave them a year of subscriptions before cancelling recently, the devcontainer implementation in their Ultimate versions is laughably bad, bugs upon bugs and tickets where their support staff just bounces it up with "still no fix" messages and customers are finding workarounds, i.e. downgrading docker installs.
Remote SSH is terrible too, handles network latency spikes by repeating keystrokes. I remember spending an evening trying to fix something in the
integrated shell and giving up, but sadly forgot what. I like what they do with Go though. Anyway, back to nvim here, not for me.
+1, the Remote SSH is horrible. Takes forever to connect and is extremely laggy once you have connected. Feels like they’re practically streaming video of the UI back to you instead of VSCode’s Remote SSH which feels indistinguishable from running locally.
Yeah I'm a big fan of the JetBrains IDEs but I tried it out a few days ago and couldn't even get it to stay connected. Gave up after reading a few recent forum posts about how much trouble people are still having with the feature (which does have a big purple "Beta" label in the IDE at least).
I'm hosting my blog on cloudflare pages, it's analytics show 80 or so uniques every day consistently even though I barely write there. Installed Umami - 0 visitors. None. Internet is just LLM crawlers hungry for content now?
We passed the tipping point where bot traffic outnumbered human traffic fifteen years ago. LLMs are an order of magnitude worse by most first-hand accounts, but it's just a continuation of a very long trend.
I wanted to use this process (LLM -> OpenSCAD) a few months ago to create custom server rack brackets (ears) for externally mounting water-cooling radiator of the server I am building. I ended up learning about 3D printing, using SolidWorks (it has great built-in tutorials) and did this the old fashioned way. This process may work for refining parts against very well known objects, i.e. iPhone, but the amount of refinement, back and forth and verbosity needed, the low acceptance rate - I do not believe we're close to using these tools for CAD.
Went to the cinema with my kids for the 2nd time to watch this one, was pleasantly surprised to read this movie was done using Blender, highly recommended.