

Here’s Rust:
fn main() {
println!("Please and Thank You");
}
Admin of kbin.earth, creator of Interstellar.
Here’s Rust:
fn main() {
println!("Please and Thank You");
}
Do programming languages count? :)
Here’s Go:
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("Please and Thank You")
}
Interstellar actually does support Lemmy as well, unless you mean other apps.
I’m the developer of Interstellar, and I am actually from the US. iOS support is something I’d like to add, but is not the priority. @[email protected] made many good points about it not catering towards FOSS projects, but I’d also like to add, it costs $100 every single year in order to have an Apple developer account, which is required if you want to publish anything to the Apple App Store. Additionally, Apple’s very expensive hardware is required in order to build and release any Apple software, which I do not own.
All that to say, I’d like to support iOS and macOS platforms, but Apple makes it extremely difficult (and costly) for that to happen. Why should I have to pay $100 every year in order to publish a free app that I’m not even making any money off of?
Interstellar is also available for desktop platforms (including Linux and Windows) if you’d prefer to try it there instead (check the GitHub page for info).
Also want to mention @olorin99, as well, for helping test and implement PieFed support in the app!
As always, let me know if you run into any issues or want to make any suggestions.
Porkbun and Cloudflare are the only one’s I use anymore. Great service and unbeatable prices for both.
Upvoting should be your default. Boosting is more like a “retweet”, where you are publicly reposting something on your profile.
What kind of hits? I haven’t heard anything.
In fact, they just released a video a month ago detailing some of the areas they’re working on, including dart macros, their new impeller engine, performance updates for the web platform, and more.
lol, I hope not.
I think Flutter (made by Google) is pretty awesome.
Looks amazing! Can’t wait to try it out.
It’s a link to an article I found interesting. It basically details why we’re still using 64-bit CPUs, just as you mentioned.
Same with kbin.earth. Unfortunately, one problem with the fediverse is that everything (users, magazines, posts, comments, etc.) is tied to the instance’s domain, so it can’t really be changed at all.
How do you update without any downtime? Is it because you have multiple servers running?
Why is it that this got the most upvotes, compared to the more genuine comments in this thread? :)