@CodyGray works for me, but that is exactly what I meant when I said I am tired :) Nothing worse in my book than repetitive unnecessary actions
@CodyGray thank you!
@CodyGray yeah, same here - this thought crossed my mind several times, and that is a concern indeed. That said, I am not sure I have seen people post images in comments other than to substantiate bug reports.
You got me curious, though - maybe a SEDE query when I have some time is due :)
I'm asking about this blog post: https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/11/24/exploding-turkeys-and-how-not-to-thaw-your-frozen-bird-top-turkey-questions-from-our-cooking-stack-exchange/?cb=1
This post is not about programming. It isn't about Stack Overflow. It's about cooking turkey.
However, the top o...
@CodyGray yeah, it might very well be - I will try to be cautious :) Likely will only version it and make available here - it is one of the "for my own convenience" scripts
yeah, definitely - actually, this was (and still is) a pending feature requests to Spectric's CommentAssist userscript, but in absence of [status-completed], I decided to finally throw together my own :)
@CodyGray yeah, I remember the discussion :) A nice-to-have thing for those who can't be bothered to learn even the basics of markdown (which seems like a significant chunk of users)
@CodyGray heh, well, some time ago I realized I post a substantial amount of images in comments, so it looked like a nice feature to have in such a script. I still find keyboard shortcuts pretty useful even for those that know markdown, mostly in the case of links, of course, the rest of it is extremely easy to type
@CodyGray yeah, that is... true. Ironically, they seem to monitor these reports, though - as Ryan Donovan is now listed as the ES6 article co-atuhor, and it was somewhat improved (not too substantially, though)
nope, nope, sorry :) green - technology-related (programming? not everything there is strictly programming-related, but I can give it a pass), red - well, about cooking turkey
speaking of the above then - it is even worse. Not even one newsletter is not about tech... As for this one - I hope not, but it is not unlikely
although I just looked through 5 pages of it, and all are at least vaguely technological
@CodyGray frankly speaking? Just to ridicule it a bit :) I do not expect it to get an official response (although if you do not try, you will never know), or the article taken down, or the scope tweaked, or anything. Just for it to be as another written testament that it is BS, and the community knows it.
@CodyGray are you sure you want to make a case for it? :) I know quite a few folks that do chores no matter how hard they are made, they just get constantly frustrated... That said, I do find it very unlikely that someone cannot learn (or like) Markdown for writing posts/comments/mssages
@CodyGray in my experience, there is an alternative - or a very stubborn one (and I know a bunch)
wait... where did the bot go?
oupsy-daisy
phew
a thought crossed my mind to implement the blame assigner in it too :) seems like brewing coffee and assigning blame are the most prominent features of bots across the network
I don't really know, but I remember seeing Makyen and Thomas discussing it. I also know that it has a memory leak, such that Thomas is now rebooting it once a day to try and recover performance.
free tier has 512Mb memory, but it does not have any credit-like limits either on CPU or memory footprint. I thought Python should be more memory usage-friendly than JS, though?
The AWS t3.small, which has 2 vCPU, on which I'm running my -num02 instance shows that it's pegging at 100% CPU for extended periods. In other words, a t3.small doesn't really cut it for running SD.
I follow a lot of chat rooms :) CPU usage should not be that much of a problem, but I wonder what about the memory footprint. If 0.5Gb is not nearly enough, then yeah, Heroku's not even a redundancy option. Jeez, Metasmoke is heavy
hmm... Does not mean much to my :) I do not know if Python is notorious for high memory usage. JS always was, but Node.js allows for very low memory footprint when using streams. Unless MS reads huge datafiles (regexes?) in-memory, I am pretty unsure why it needs that much memory. CPU usage I understand
wonder if it can be done in streamed chunks? But that's Node speaking in me, I do not really know how it applies to Python and, especially, to the Metasmoke project