null_radix Now • 25%
I don't think I'm a socialist, but we can agree on reading.
null_radix Now • 7%
Fuck around and find out mfsss.
So hmm, i guess this is the finally warning, right?
null_radix Now • 5%
ah fuck, I can't tell tankies apart from Qanon now
null_radix Now • 33%
As a male, its probably easier to get away with, so yes sometimes I use the ❤️ emoji. I have never sent a dick pic or received one.
null_radix Now • 50%
I think i was meaning literal bots, but I may have been a bit inebriated.
null_radix Now • 14%
hmm interesting, China has halted trade with China.
null_radix Now • 10%
China's bluff was called.
null_radix Now • 66%
Left Market Anarchist advocate against capitalism, see markets not capitalism, while libertarian is a more nebulous term as far as I know.
null_radix Now • 40%
I got some pretty good jokes
null_radix Now • 100%
mor here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9jirFqex6g basically deregulation is needed to compete with airlines.
null_radix Now • 25%
null_radix Now • 50%
yeah the the ones that allow all humans alright, but have you tried the ones that allow bots too?
null_radix Now • 100%
the antithesis of fuck cars should be called "fuck trees"
null_radix Now • 25%
yeah, idk, seems pretty cool to me if you can con a vc into giving ya 25 mil. you are saying it is a bad thing?
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/344859 > We are constantly reading of stories with one main theme where people turn to seemingly "simple" systems in order to manage complexity; except that these systems manage to produce complex problems, without having to acquire historical cruft, or suffering from any of the usual issues that produce non-essential complexity. There is a trend in programming language design, and a particular language that we will focus on, that are both seemingly gaining popularity today, for their minimalism and supposed simplicity. However, neither is awfully simple in practise; it appears there are good reasons why, and we will give some reasons at the end of this article.
We are constantly reading of stories with one main theme where people turn to seemingly "simple" systems in order to manage complexity; except that these systems manage to produce complex problems, without having to acquire historical cruft, or suffering from any of the usual issues that produce non-essential complexity. There is a trend in programming language design, and a particular language that we will focus on, that are both seemingly gaining popularity today, for their minimalism and supposed simplicity. However, neither is awfully simple in practise; it appears there are good reasons why, and we will give some reasons at the end of this article.
Ethereum is moving towards a major upgrade that aims at making the network more sustainable, with the transition from Proof-of-Work (PoW) to Proof-of-Stake, and more scalable with the introduction of data sharding. This process started with the deployment of the Beacon Chain in December 2020 and the next step called the Merge which is expected to happen later this year. In this article we look at how far the Ethereum 2 ecosystem has progressed in this transition and how ready is to move to the next level.
NU5, the first major upgrade since November 2020, includes the launch of the Orchard shielded payment protocol, utilizing the Halo proving system to remove reliance on complex setup ceremonies. The efficiencies built into this upgrade make possible — for the first time ever — private, trustless digital cash payments on mobile phones. Halo also paves the way for increased interoperability by providing a system that could unlock private cross-chain proofs at scale.