There are 2 kinds of "not knowing"
1. When you know a given question but do not yet know the answer. E.g. how old is the oldest person on the planet? I know a truth exists but I do not know the answer.
2. When you do not even know the question which we could answer.
When humans discover stuff through science, they find answers, but usually, they find even more questions. E.g. the question "what does Hydrogen consist of?" was always a valid question and it always had an answer. However, until we discovered that Hydrogen exists we did not know this was even something we didn't know. The question had not existed in any human mind.
It's a reasonable conclusion that as human technology progresses, many more questions will pop up that we, today, do not even know we could ask. These questions all hide truths about reality and we do not yet know them.
But question is: Will we able to come up with *all* the questions we could answer? Or, more importantly, how could we even know we asked all the questions we could ask? Are we fundamentally capable of asking all the questions about anything we could ask a question about? We don't know.
[comment]
1. When you know a given question but do not yet know the answer. E.g. how old is the oldest person on the planet? I know a truth exists but I do not know the answer.
2. When you do not even know the question which we could answer.
When humans discover stuff through science, they find answers, but usually, they find even more questions. E.g. the question "what does Hydrogen consist of?" was always a valid question and it always had an answer. However, until we discovered that Hydrogen exists we did not know this was even something we didn't know. The question had not existed in any human mind.
It's a reasonable conclusion that as human technology progresses, many more questions will pop up that we, today, do not even know we could ask. These questions all hide truths about reality and we do not yet know them.
But question is: Will we able to come up with *all* the questions we could answer? Or, more importantly, how could we even know we asked all the questions we could ask? Are we fundamentally capable of asking all the questions about anything we could ask a question about? We don't know.
[comment]
β€4π₯1
I heard someone say, "I fell in the shower and tried to grab the water" ππ
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π
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π€£22
Try to shake up just one thing every day. A different route, new food or coffee, new conversation...childhood was full of novelty but not anymore.
π₯6
Forwarded from RaGoose
Yomu
an all-in-one reading companion designed for book lovers and audiobook enthusiasts. Whether you're diving into an EPUB, studying a PDF, or listening on the go, Yomu tracks your progress and gamifies your reading journey to help you reach your goals.
so one day i decided to get back to reading books(as any normal person does), and started reading, then since its been awhile i read heavy stuff(normal book actually, just heavy for me π), the process got boring, so i tried audiobooks, and now my ADHD kicks in and started taking me places while listening, when i got back am up to 2,3 chapter and the main character had died or sth, so i started reading while listening to the audiobook at the same time, that really improved my experience.
but now i face another problem, 1 am using two different apps, 2 i was using samsung music for my audiobooks so everytime i open another audio to listen to music i've lost the track of my timestamp, now everytime i get back to reading i have to find the exact place where i left of and continue from there, trust me do this once or twice a day, you're better of not reading at all.
so why not build an app for it that got both feature i need reading while listening and rememebers where i left off and all. thats why Yomu is created
'Yomu' means 'to read' in japanase and 'anytime' in afan oromo, so two languages, one mission: "To read, anytime".
since i used to use moonreader(the best reader ever), i tried to apply their best features here, including the little ones like, searching from web for hte book's cover
so i present to you: YOMU
Features
Multi-Format Support: Seamlessly read EPUB and PDF files with a smooth, optimized interface.
Audiobook Integration: Enjoy your favorite audiobooks with built-in playback controls.
Progress Monitoring: Track exactly how many pages and minutes you've read.
Goal Setting: Set weekly reading goals (by pages) to stay consistent.
Ranks & Levels: Progress from Kohai to Tatsujin based on both your Level (XP) and Achievements.
Activity Visualizations: Beautiful charts and insights into your reading habits.
Download it from Playstore
Star the repo on Github
an all-in-one reading companion designed for book lovers and audiobook enthusiasts. Whether you're diving into an EPUB, studying a PDF, or listening on the go, Yomu tracks your progress and gamifies your reading journey to help you reach your goals.
so one day i decided to get back to reading books(as any normal person does), and started reading, then since its been awhile i read heavy stuff(normal book actually, just heavy for me π), the process got boring, so i tried audiobooks, and now my ADHD kicks in and started taking me places while listening, when i got back am up to 2,3 chapter and the main character had died or sth, so i started reading while listening to the audiobook at the same time, that really improved my experience.
but now i face another problem, 1 am using two different apps, 2 i was using samsung music for my audiobooks so everytime i open another audio to listen to music i've lost the track of my timestamp, now everytime i get back to reading i have to find the exact place where i left of and continue from there, trust me do this once or twice a day, you're better of not reading at all.
so why not build an app for it that got both feature i need reading while listening and rememebers where i left off and all. thats why Yomu is created
'Yomu' means 'to read' in japanase and 'anytime' in afan oromo, so two languages, one mission: "To read, anytime".
since i used to use moonreader(the best reader ever), i tried to apply their best features here, including the little ones like, searching from web for hte book's cover
so i present to you: YOMU
Features
Multi-Format Support: Seamlessly read EPUB and PDF files with a smooth, optimized interface.
Audiobook Integration: Enjoy your favorite audiobooks with built-in playback controls.
Progress Monitoring: Track exactly how many pages and minutes you've read.
Goal Setting: Set weekly reading goals (by pages) to stay consistent.
Ranks & Levels: Progress from Kohai to Tatsujin based on both your Level (XP) and Achievements.
Activity Visualizations: Beautiful charts and insights into your reading habits.
Download it from Playstore
Star the repo on Github
π₯4
Forwarded from Robi makes stuff (Robi)
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
I don't think we should be paying 9$/m for load testing using machines we own.
so i built loadcell (FOSS), run http requests, save them as a load testing profile, draw ramp up curves and run them concurrently with go.
https://x.com/Robimez/status/2061939732049801224?s=20
github.com/robimez/loadcell
@rb_wk & @robi_makes_stuff
so i built loadcell (FOSS), run http requests, save them as a load testing profile, draw ramp up curves and run them concurrently with go.
https://x.com/Robimez/status/2061939732049801224?s=20
github.com/robimez/loadcell
@rb_wk & @robi_makes_stuff
π₯3
Forwarded from Sam's Archive
Introducing BirrJS
A TypeScript billing engine for the Ethiopian market. Payment gateways here only handle one-time payments, so there's no built-in support for subscriptions, entitlements, or reminders.
BirrJS fills that gap with a subscription lifecycle engine that handles plans, feature gating, usage tracking, expiry and reminders, and easy payment provider integration.
[ Docs ]
[ Github ]
A TypeScript billing engine for the Ethiopian market. Payment gateways here only handle one-time payments, so there's no built-in support for subscriptions, entitlements, or reminders.
BirrJS fills that gap with a subscription lifecycle engine that handles plans, feature gating, usage tracking, expiry and reminders, and easy payment provider integration.
[ Docs ]
[ Github ]
β€4π₯3
binge listening to people's telegram profile music π..a whole lotta genres
π€£7
Tech Nerd
"Man cannot remake himself without suffering, for he is both the marble and the sculptor."
β Alexis Carrel
β Alexis Carrel
A sculptor creates not by adding stone, but by removing it.
β someone on some reel
β someone on some reel
β€1