most recent released project was https://app.v3m.pw/ (github mirror linked there). LLMs killed my will to finish other ongoing projects (I have a trading bot and some other projects started)
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I've been working on my first Python package to upload to PyPI to be used in more of my projects.
It's a lot of work compared to some of my hobbyist projects as I'm trying to be (somewhat) professional about it.
It's also my first time writing actual documentation designed for others to read. It's a lot harder than I though to write good documentation. Thankfully, sphinx helps with pulling docstrings from my code. I just wrote a Quick-Start Guide to get people started using the package.
It's fun though as I'm learning a new stack for Python package development (hatch/hatchling, ReadTheDocs, sphinx, PyPI). I'm almost done with the initial release too!
I've only worked on basic TensorFlow stuff in python but this sounds pretty similar to my first experience making a rust crate xd
Professionally or hobbywise?
Hobbywise I'm pretty dead lately cause I left all my embedded gear at my parents when I moved.
Professionally I am trying to optimize software on a microcontroller to minimize power consumption for my master thesis. Currently I'm sitting at an average power draw of 70 uA at 3V. If all goes well I might get it even lower
I don't understand the frame of reference for 70uA at 3v but I'm glad its going well goodluck!
Same. Hobbywise, my stuff is still packed up after a move.
Professionally, I'm cleaning up AI slop. It pays!
"Professionally, I’m cleaning up AI slop. It pays!"
Heyo, Let me get in on that action. I have been refusing AI since day one for this exact reason
Local LLMs and learning CUDA on a machine with 6 1070Ti GPUs... Some of it works out of the box... For other stuff I'm having to explore what will work on the sm61 cuda architecture.
Also getting better at running a pair of old 3d printers.
I'm not one to buy new hardware if you can't tell :P
With the current prices I don't blame you, maybe a few years ago id feel different xd
As a hobby I'm dabbling into local LLM shenanigans and self-hosting.
Professionally I'm working on a VR training sandbox involving trains and signal boxes.
Open Phone (currently on hold, the webpage deteriorated over time) a Nokia phone as if it was made today. (usb-c, arm processor, 5g, 1tb sd, rss reader, podcasts, 2fa, web radio, fediverse client, offline lexicon, offline translator, weather, music, maps only showing a compass with directions, signal messenger)
An Arcade Machine built on top of a sensible Linux base running on a raspberry. The goal is to bring indie games in cafés and bars as I am super bummed out about arcades not being a thing :(
those are both really cool projects, I'm always happy to see people make hardware that's actually a positive to humanity
Yea, im kinda sick of what the tech industry has become. I do believe that tech and even the internet can have a net positive for humanity and I don't mean it in the early silicon valley "making the world a better place thanks to my compression algorithm" sort of way. I does have the power to bring humans together and not stand in between as well as be an extension of your brain and not a replacement.
cough cough American hyper-capitalism
3 node kubernetes cluster on Mini-PCs for my website and *arr stack. Plus a nice new day 12 disk NAS.
For the past couple weeks I've been working on getting a small self hosted server up and running. It's running off a Rasberry Pi 5 + a portable USB 3 hard drive so it's quite small and simple. It runs Alpine Linux and I'm using rootless podman to manage my containers.
I've been writing my own backup system which are all POSIX portable scripts focused around rsync. One script handles chains of rsync commands based on files. One script handles the number of backups and the current script I'm writing handles stopping and starting containers for before and after a backup.
All the scripts are minimal, focus on one specific task and easy to use in scripts. There's lots of focus on making them safe to use with lots of error handling.
After that I need to make a keep alive script because I lose all connectivity to the server sometimes, including ssh. The device isn't frozen, just stops talking for reasons unknown. After that I want to secure my ssh connection with wiregaurd and my server will be secure and low maintenance enough for my liking.
I have my completed scripts up on codeberg.
I like the look of the backup scripts and I might use the dynamic motd script. Id love to hear more about what your selfhosting? (also btw you using codeberg is hella respect)
Thanks, I've learned a lot about Linux focusing on learning POSIX portable scripts. It's been an experience.
I just have two containers. Caddy which handles let's encrypt certificates and Kiwix to host Wikipedia plus about 10 other wikis, ranging from Linux coding to first aid, gardening, and other stuff meant for local self sufficiency.
I also use Caddy as a basic file server. I have a number of self sufficiency books on there, POSIX coding references and all my scripts and notes on Alpine Linux. I also have a static blog site there simply using Caddy as well.
I have a strong focus on minimalism so I don't intend in going crazy with self hosted services. Also I have huge trust issues with so many self hosted projects so making my own projects when possible means less exposure to security vulnerabilities, AI or enablers of Authoritarian powers.
I spent a lot of time making it secure with some added obscurity so only myself and those who I share my site with can feel safe connecting to my server. It's been quite the learning adventure.
Let me know if you have any issues with the motd script. I gather most of the information from /sys/ and /proc/ files so hopefully it's consistent and accurate across other distributions. I've only tested it on Alpine Linux.
I have a strong focus on minimalism so I don’t intend in going crazy with self hosted services. Also I have huge trust issues with so many self hosted projects so making my own projects when possible means less exposure to security vulnerabilities, AI or enablers of Authoritarian powers.
I feel this heavy bro. I used to make minimal projects to satisfy what I needed like a kabanboard or pgp management or wtr. I wish more software took the time to protect against their real-world threat model but alas alot of the times there is negative profit incentive to do so...
also, If I remember to let you know I will, I hardly make stuff anymore so I don't use my vps' often
A dating app that takes users seriously. Respect their filters, don't price gauge, eschew dark patterns, that jazz. It's nearing something production ready, but I'm still fretting over where (geographically) to launch and how to get to sufficient user density without spending a cartload of cash on marketing. I also find it difficult to strike a balance between even mentioning this project, and not being seen as spamming product placement in unwanted communities.
"takes users seriously. Respect their filters, don’t price gauge, eschew dark patterns, that jazz"
Is all this true because "you have a goal" or "we have strict rules"? because that's how most dating platforms start but when they grow the new people in the project don't care about the founders goal and it slowly enshittifies. That being said if its actually designed to give the users real control so they can prevent the enshittifcation then I'm very interested
"I’m still fretting over where (geographically) to launch"
If its an app why does there need to be a geo restricted launch? if there's a valid reason id say launch in the closest capital to you
"how to get to sufficient user density without spending a cartload of cash on marketing"
Unfortunately money does buy fame. it'll take ages to organically grow but using/creating a network will help (easier said then done)
"not being seen as spamming product placement in unwanted communities"
I feel that, its very dependent innit. you just gotta mention it without sounding like a shill tbh
Thank you for the interest. Sorry to leave you hanging there, Cyn. (Funny, I knew a Cyn once.)
Not sure I follow your distinction between goal and rules there. It is certainly based on values and ideology more than a vision to become rich off of it. Some examples of how values look in concrete terms:
- filters are bidirectional, so if for instance your filter says "no smokers" then you obviously won't see any smokers - but also, your profile won't be shown to other users who are smokers.
- if you've set a geographical range (say, 50km), we won't sneak in users who are thousands of km away from you.
- you'd pay a fixed price to get access to everything for 30 days. Furthermore, you are free to pause/resume your account if, for instance, you only want to be active on the weekends or every other week, and those 30 days will only "tick" on active days.
- the entire thing will be developed and hosted from within the EU. It's easier to leave the app than to sign up for it. There's a one-click "hand over my data" GDPR button. I would rather close the whole thing down than ever sell out to Match Group. I know, this is just words on a screen but still, those are my values.
About the geo restriction, good question. The plan isn't to actively restrict users, but to launch with a focus in one area (say, Amsterdam). The thing is, it can make a lot of sense to host a little tool on github and have six people find it useful - but for a matchmaking app, what you really need is user density and in that regard it helps to focus on a smaller area to begin with. Six users on each and every continent aren't going to find great matches.
I like my account. I like the communities I'm in. I'd hate to be seen as a sleazy ad-monger or product peddler. I'd rather go slow and learn where such "hey by the way" conversation is not just acceptable but even encouraged.

beep bop boop?
I wonder whats on the microcontroller also... micropython 👀
Micropython<3
but... c++