Dov
dov.dev
Dov
@dov.dev
new world entrant to the larger software world.

Databasing @materialize.com
I say "all my haters become my waiters when I sit down at the table of success" no less than 3 times a week
September 16, 2025 at 2:57 AM
lol this is what I texted Bobby after responding earlier
August 20, 2025 at 2:51 AM
This works with git diff too but it uses the pager by default and I can’t remember how to tell it to stop that
August 19, 2025 at 10:49 PM
git diff-tree --no-commit-id --name-only -r commit1..commit2
August 19, 2025 at 10:28 PM
Or git diff commit1..commit2 to get the ones in between
August 19, 2025 at 10:16 PM
Maybe I’m misunderstanding but… git diff commit1 commit2?

Diff tree or whatever
August 19, 2025 at 10:14 PM
Two of them started swinging at each other and I made a loud disappointed noise and they stopped.
December 2, 2024 at 4:14 AM
They have dragged a table(?) from somewhere and are throwing things at windows. I feel old
December 2, 2024 at 3:46 AM
"buddy you wouldn't know what an argument with merits looked like if it was staring you in the face"
December 2, 2024 at 3:35 AM
+ we were already running into issues re: we couldn't have as much control over nomad scheduling decisions as we needed! The problem isn't quite nomad (it's great software) but that our use case is one that nomad was never designed for. We were pushing it past it's limits and cracks started to show.
November 26, 2024 at 7:18 PM
Scheduling workloads across regions for users is part of the core proposition. Federated nomad does not allow for that. You can manually submit jobs to any region but for us, that would require us to build another scheduler on top of the nomad scheduler to make that work. /2
November 26, 2024 at 7:18 PM
As someone who worked on our platform in the nomad days and worked on the transition, I don't entirely disagree, we held nomad wrong, but... Nomad has built in multiregion federation, but that doesn't match our use case. The thing about our platform is it's inherently global. /1
November 26, 2024 at 7:18 PM
Reposted by Dov
I'm rereading The Pushcart War for reasons and am reminded again how it is not only science-fiction (set in the future!) and formally inventive, but also is a manual for collective action, resistance, protest, that is very relevant today. So here's a thread:
February 18, 2024 at 3:24 PM
I would also like to see it
November 17, 2024 at 6:14 PM