![nvalt andriod companion nvalt andriod companion](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5LIz6Y9E8q0/maxresdefault.jpg)
As Ben Thompson explained in Zero Trust Information, though, not only have most of the institutional players put forth bad information throughout this crisis, they actively sought to suppress critical (factual) information as well. In closing, he played up the importance of institutional backing for these sites as a way to lend them credibility. I wish I could say he finished strong as well, but he just completely missed the mark. Bring Back Blogs By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 04/28 12:03:45 EST in PoliticsĬal started strong: his recommendation that experts improve the decentralized distribution of critical information by moving beyond Twitter, the original microblog, to their own blogs hits the nail on the head. Read more ⓩ 'Expert Twitter' Only Goes So Far. Tobias has some sound advice, most of which I incorporated into the dev projects I started during the shelter-in-place period. “Early Validation” was a particularly good point. Tobias focused not on configuring the environment, though, but rather best practices for configuring the control flow in the program itself. I opened Tobias Pfeiffer’s article expecting something along the lines of Your configs suck? Try a real programming language. Read more ⓩ Best Practices for Working with Configuration in Python Applications By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 04/29 07:36:26 EST in Programming I love multiprocessing, and in this interesting piece by Tristan Hume, he takes parallel execution to another level. Read more ⓩ Teleforking a process onto a different computer By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 04/30 10:37:23 EST in Programming For now, though, let’s talk about First Crack - a day late, yes, but I hope not a dollar short.
![nvalt andriod companion nvalt andriod companion](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/f7/b6/3b/f7b63b83bc03171b09f551c251ed1d8a.png)
My project, Swig 1, solves all of these problems. The surprisingly capable rver library has zero dependencies and supports concurrent execution, but is ill-suited for building out an entire web application. I liked Bottle even more, since it mirrors most of Flask’s functionality without any dependencies, but it lacks the ability to handle concurrent connections. I won’t spend much time on this now, since I plan to deploy it in an Intranet soon and then release it after some real use, but I will say this: I liked Flask, but it has far too many dependencies to work in my target environment. After fighting with Flask, Bottle, and then Python’s own rver library, I decided to write my own web framework. I spent most of my development time in April working on a project that I can, at best, call tangentially related to First Crack.
#NVALT ANDRIOD COMPANION CRACK#
Read more ⓩ First Crack Release Notes, April 2020 By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 05/02 19:53:45 EST in Programming Today, I want to talk about the simple way I apply this concept to my code, as a way to architect more reliable programs. Having spent some time on my projects’ more theoretical side lately, I found this idea at once interesting and then familiar. I happened across The Law of Requisite Variety the other day, which states that a system for which D possible disruptions exist requires R countermeasures to keep itself stable, where R >= D. Read more ⓩ Fail by Default By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 05/04 08:54:21 EST in Programming Most of these types of lists are garbage, but I like this one. Read more ⓩ 68 Bits of Unsolicited Advice By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 05/06 09:07:01 EST in Personal Development I have stuck with monthly releases since June of last year, though, and today I want to explain why. Even the entirety of First Crack’s rewrite happened over the course of a couple weeks, in the mornings before work and on the weekends. If you looked at First Crack’s internal commit history, you would see that most features take at most a few days to write.
#NVALT ANDRIOD COMPANION ARCHIVE#
Post Archive - Zachary Szewczyk Home Blog Explore RSS Post Archives Projects Disclaimers Why I Chose a Monthly Release Schedule By Zac Szewczyk on 2020/ 05/08 07:36:36 EST in Programming