Working with Napoli on this has been a great pleasure. I loved the experience of making something extremely simple for developers and learn Typescript along the way. Turns out 7777 is so much better than I expected and it was also more challenging than I expected
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Since we'll be launching https://t.co/c8g1mFPFvi this week with @deleugyn, here's a quick thread on how the serverless backend is built.
It's a bit experimental, with a mix of PHP 8 and advanced Bref features, with a goal of making it as simple as possible.
Let's start 👇️
@adamdotdev the app would definitely be better on 95% of things for me. Except I can always ignore an app. Without having an appointment with a sadistic maniac, I would never go to the gym
@adamwathan@jamesqquick I think one of the reasons I haven’t launched a successful product is precisely because I also don’t want to do that, but there certainly seems to be a market for it. I could grab an international product, translate it to my country and target locals that don’t speak English
@adamwathan@jamesqquick It’s not surprising. For those of us that never launched a successful product, the biggest recommendation on any startup / founder community is: “do what someone else is already doing. It’s a tried and tested market”.
Stealing a design is just another layer to it
@austinvach@QuinnyPig I understand that families are affected, but the assassination was personal and carried out with the victim being the single target. It was a “consequence of who he was” (allegedly). Bombing someone’s home is uncontrolled and put everyone at risk
@austinvach@QuinnyPig I totally see your point, but between the two, the shot to the neck is a targeted attack while the bomb to the house is a family attack. One is assassination and the other is terrorism
@GergelyOrosz Perhaps since there’s a strong split between “works for me” vs “I know the feeling”, maybe your wrong assumption is that they have a stellar engineering team that can offer a consistent experience at their scale?
@jeremy_daly@OpenAI@AnthropicAI I agree that they’re playing a different game, but not the way you put it. More like American football vs football. Anthropic token pricing is for elite-only. OpenAI is accessible for small businesses and scale up with nano and mini
@GrapheneOS@chicken_head101@Fr5Simon The law was carefully designed to specify “proportional measures” needs to be taken. That means that billion dollar companies actions must be PROPORTIONAL to what they can do. Free open source software doesn’t have to do anything.
@chicken_head101@Fr5Simon@GrapheneOS I’m naive and I don’t care about privacy. But nevertheless all things about this Brazilian law is being blown way out of proportion to serve an agenda
@samlambert@AsphaltCowb0y I got no dog in this fight and I quite enjoy reading what you put out there, but he didn’t sound dumb to me. Perhaps it’s really best for you to dismiss the whole thing, I’m not a high profile CEO so I don’t know, but you’re not coming off great on this one
@matthieunapoli I like to do something very similar except I use a read only class with all configuration as props of the class and then I usually have a service provider setting things up. I loathe having too many environment variables
@jarredsumner@badlogicgames Anthropic can even make it delayed. When tagging version x.y, publish version x.y-5 or whatever. Give people something. Show that Anthropic is not an OSS hater that it seems to be.
@jarredsumner@badlogicgames Anthropic is under a bad perception from people. We pay for it and use only because it’s currently the best model. Even if it’s always the best model, doesn’t mean we will subject ourselves to it forever.
Make it source available. Keep PRs blocked. But take a step for trust
@enunomaduro I know there's a ton of effort that goes into those and you are too successful for this to matter, but can you hear Reddit's comments on the irony that PAO solves a problem that PEST created which phpunit doesn't entirely have? 😂😂😂
@andrewbrown@RaviRaiML@github I think there’s an argument to be made about the amount of code available on 1) lost accounts 2) accounts of deceased 3) accounts of people that no longer uses GitHub, etc