FiniteBanjo

joined 5 months ago
[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev -4 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago) (1 children)

A CDN is not a programming language library

You think they were just magicked into existence? Nah, they were programmed, and you can use specific syntax to call upon their functions.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev -5 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

FileSystem Framework

FileSystem Framework

FileSystem Framework

Examples: Laravel, ASP.NET, and NodeJS FS

Did that clear up your confusion?

Here is a link to the documentation for NodeJS FS: https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html

Here is a link to Laravel's FileSystem documentation with quote: https://www.laravel.wiki/en/filesystem

Laravel provides a powerful filesystem abstraction thanks to the wonderful Flysystem PHP package by Frank de Jonge.

It's fine to be legitimately curious but if you think the question is wrong then you're arguing with reality.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev -4 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago) (1 children)

If you know what PHP, Laravel, NodeJS:FS, etc are, or if you have a rudimentary understanding of tech stack terminology, then you know what FikeSystem refers to in this context. This post has answers and discussion before these sealioning "I dOn'T unDERsTaNd" trolls came in and started brigading.

If you don't know then you cannot and should not answer this question.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev -5 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) (1 children)

Try reading the post and you will see it's about finding a filesystem tool used in web development such as Laravel or NodejsFS. There is no ambiguity here, this isnt about thumb drives or operating systems.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev 0 points 15 hours ago

Ty for the reply, I will look more into SeaweedFS.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev -3 points 21 hours ago (10 children)

So, I am no expert, but, usually "tech stacks" have 2 or more parts:

  1. Frontend Framework: Vue, Angular, React, etc

  2. Backend Frameworks comprised of Content Delivery Network (CDN) such as CloudFlare, Database such as MondoDB or MySQL which efficiently stores and serves non-binary data, and a FileSystem which efficiently stores and serves binary data such as images and videos.

The benefits of using an isolated FileSystem solution is that it can be much more secure and easier to implement.

But idk, I'm an ameteur at best.

[–] FiniteBanjo@programming.dev 0 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago) (2 children)

Are they maintainable long term?

EDIT: Seaweed appears to sell storage used for the project? Can it not be selfhosted?

EDIT 2: RustFS: "The fast data foundation for the AI era."

 

While getting quotes for a site recently the question of filesystem came up a lot and I admittedly didn't know much on the subject.

Doing some research the popular choices appear to be either PHP frameworks or less often ASP.NET frameworks.

Among popular PHP frameworks I see Laravel come up a lot, open source is certainly more reliable than something maintained by Google, Facebook, or Amazon but currently the Laravel maintainers are pushing AI really really hard.

So is the only real solution to learn to program with PHP without using any frameworks or libraries? Can anybody who has implemented a secure fileserver for a website tell me how difficult or easy it would be to learn?

 

My team has decided to put the launch on hold, for now, I appreciate everyone's interest in the project and I'm very thankful for all of the input and helpful discussion.


I tried making a Freelancer post, as I used their service once years ago and it was generally pleasant, but I was immediately bombarded with AI Applicants and an AI Recruiter grilling me for answers to its questions. Immediately deleted the post and the entire account.

Where do I go to get a quote for some work done by some actual human beings? I don't need AI, I don't want AI, if someone automate their quoting process then I'm out because I'm not gonna fuckin negotiate with the hallucinating vending machine.

EDIT: ~~I attempted a post on UpWork.com and there is far less AI response than on Freelancer, but I've still declined all offers so far because they failed an important filter question. Still, I've been able to get quotes! FINALLY! Looks like my website could potentially be built for some number between $5,000 and $38,000. Very interesting. As some commenters have suggested, I'll check out some options in local cities, though I doubt I'll find much in my small studio's price range.~~ EDIT2: These quotes are bogus, I think. I've been seeing the same phrases repeat across multiple proposals "AI is a powerful tool but no replacement for creativity". I went through so many proposals and not a single one looked like a real human capable of adhering to a no-ai policy.

 

I've repaired this worthless older generation Logitech G Hero mouse 5 times in two years, but after its most recent cleaning the 5 pin cable molex snapped and I feel absolutely no desire to keep this creature alive for another moment.

I had a similar cable failure on a Logitech keyboard awhile back, which admittedly I did fix and do plan to keep around because it's hard to find a mechanical keyboard with an aluminium body and also NOT completely covered to the teeth with rainbow LEDs.

Can anybody recommend me a good durable mouse, preferably not aimed at gamers?

 

This already exists for automatic AI detection with a percentage accuracy, but it doesn't usually include a nightshade indicator. There are also different sites that let you mess with contrast and/or saturation, though not all of them work with URL and no site does all three.

The purpose of the contrast/saturation controls are that it makes noise in the image super visible which can be a dead giveaway for AI, but there is also noise in Nightshade.

 

The PAS 5500/1150C is capable of producing wafers at a resolution of ≤ 90 nm with a wavelength of 193 nm, according to THIS DOCUMENT. It's a machine from the 90s and gets support through 2035.

I don't know what the actual requirements are for printing more modern chips and wafers, though.

Do you think there is much margin to be had with the more recent machines, as in cost vs benefit? There are no import restrictions in my case, for the record.

EDIT:

I did some digging and probably the answer is "NO" because the first 1GB DDR5 from Hynix was ≤ 50 nm and more modern chips use ≤ 20 nm, while I can't find anything confirming lower resolutions can't I doubt any current plans exist for it.

 

I'm looking at building a website to host comics, a small blog, and store user credentials and comments. Possibly a store.

I've tried this on one separate occasion over a year ago, first I tried using .net as a full stack but I got frustrated with how none of the tutorials on setting up the database, with some forms to submit to it, worked in the then current versions. After that I attempted to program everything in React, but React Router wasn't working well at the time and in general it's more specialized in single page applications. I have hosted some multipage react sites on Ionos before, domains bought elsewhere, so there is no issues on figuring that part out.

So if you were to build it, what would you use? If you were to pay for something like it, what do you think would be a reasonable price?

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