jolt
go
jolt | go | |
---|---|---|
17 | 2,079 | |
167 | 119,900 | |
- | 0.9% | |
7.7 | 10.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
jolt
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Selfhosted rating platform?
If you just want movies and shows, check out Jolt. An app I'm building that's meant to be the social hub of your media server.
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Any new Opensource projects in (go) looking for contributors. I want to start my journey as an OSS contributor.
If you're interested in media serving, Jolt needs a lot of work with many features. The project management isn't quite setup yet for large teams, but I'd be open to chatting about collaboration. :)
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Is there some software that can help me create a collage of movies, shows, books, etc. that I like/watch/read?
I'm working on Jolt which syncs with your Jellyfin server and shows movies and shows you've watched, and you can go to your own profile to see a grid of the media.
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Chocolate, an opensource alternative to Plex
Combined with GolangCI-Lint, a project I'm working on right now called Jolt makes sure errors are handled, pointers are used correctly, variable naming is following all the conventions and a bunch of more stuff. Setting up a toolchain like this in Python would be a huge pain.
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Jolt v0.5.2 is available!
A couple days ago I posted about Jolt, a social hub for media servers that allows users to rate, review, recommend media and track what they've watched as well as add media to their watchlist, and got a very positive response from this subreddit.
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Scoring/Weighting Algorithm for Movie Suggestions
I've been working on a platform that generates suggestions for movies based on what users have watched and their ratings of those movies. The project is Jolt, if you guys want to check that out. Now I'm trying to brainstorm a sort of scoring/weighting algorithm that could take more things into account, when overlapping scores are generated based on the parameters outlined.
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A way to view popular movies / shows I don't have ?
I'm also currently working on a project - and have been posting some updates here and on r/selfhosted, called Jolt which takes a social approach to discovery. In addition to using TMDB to find popular shows and movies, as well as generating suggestions based on what you like, it allows you and your friends to discover media together, and recommend it to one another.
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How to automate the entire release flow with GH Actions?
I am working on a small open-source project at the moment, called Jolt, for which I really want to keep my CI/CD as simple as possible. I have experience in GitLab and Drone pipelines, as well as some others, but with the publicly available GH Actions I'm having trouble setting up something that does the following:
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Hound - Self hosted solution for tracking tv shows, movies, games, etc.
Hey, I noticed we're both working on extremely similar projects. Jolt also tracks what you've watched, allows you to maintain a watchlist, and generates recommendations based on your ratings.
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v0.1.0-prelrease of the Jolt image is available to test!
Hey everyone, yesterday I posted about Jolt, which is a social hub for media servers that is meant to be used hand-in-hand with Jellyfin. With some help from the community, I have semi-automatic builds of the Docker image running now in GitHub Actions, which means that an early version is available to test for those interested!
go
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Arena-Based Parsers
The description indicates it is not production ready, and is archived at the same time.
If you pull all stops in each respective language, C# will always end up winning at parsing text as it offers C structs, pointers, zero-cost interop, Rust-style struct generics, cross-platform SIMD API and simply has better compiler. You can win back some performance in Go by writing hot parts in Go's ASM dialect at much greater effort for a specific platform.
For example, Go has to resort to this https://github.com/golang/go/blob/4ed358b57efdad9ed710be7f4f... in order to efficiently scan memory, while in C# you write the following once and it compiles to all supported ISAs with their respective SIMD instructions for a given vector width: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/blob/56e67a7aacb8a644cc6b8... (there is a lot of code because C# covers much wider range of scenarios and does not accept sacrificing performance in odd lengths and edge cases, which Go does).
Another example is computing CRC32: you have to write ASM for Go https://github.com/golang/go/blob/4ed358b57efdad9ed710be7f4f..., in C# you simply write standard vectorized routine once https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/blob/56e67a7aacb8a644cc6b8... (its codegen is competitive with hand-intrinsified C++ code).
There is a lot more of this. Performance and low-level primitives to achieve it have been an area of focus of .NET for a long time, so it is disheartening to see one tenth of effort in Go to receive so much spotlight.
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Go: the future encoding/json/v2 module
A Discussion about including this package in Go as encoding/json/v2 has been started on the Go Github project on 2023-10-05. Please provide your feedback there.
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Evolving the Go Standard Library with math/rand/v2
I like the Principles section. Very measured and practical approach to releasing new stdlib packages. https://go.dev/blog/randv2#principles
The end of the post they mention that an encoding/json/v2 package is in the works: https://github.com/golang/go/discussions/63397
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Microsoft Maintains Go Fork for FIPS 140-2 Support
There used to be the GO FIPS branch :
https://github.com/golang/go/tree/dev.boringcrypto/misc/bori...
But it looks dead.
And it looks like https://github.com/golang-fips/go as well.
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Borgo is a statically typed language that compiles to Go
I'm not sure what exactly you mean by acknowledgement, but here are some counterexamples:
- A proposal for sum types by a Go team member: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/57644
- The community proposal with some comments from the Go team: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/19412
Here are some excerpts from the latest Go survey [1]:
- "The top responses in the closed-form were learning how to write Go effectively (15%) and the verbosity of error handling (13%)."
- "The most common response mentioned Go’s type system, and often asked specifically for enums, option types, or sum types in Go."
I think the problem is not the lack of will on the part of the Go team, but rather that these issues are not easy to fix in a way that fits the language and doesn't cause too many issues with backwards compatibility.
[1]: https://go.dev/blog/survey2024-h1-results
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AWS Serverless Diversity: Multi-Language Strategies for Optimal Solutions
Now, I’m not going to use C++ again; I left that chapter years ago, and it’s not going to happen. C++ isn’t memory safe and easy to use and would require extended time for developers to adapt. Rust is the new kid on the block, but I’ve heard mixed opinions about its developer experience, and there aren’t many libraries around it yet. LLRD is too new for my taste, but **Go** caught my attention.
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How to use Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) for Go applications
Generative AI development has been democratised, thanks to powerful Machine Learning models (specifically Large Language Models such as Claude, Meta's LLama 2, etc.) being exposed by managed platforms/services as API calls. This frees developers from the infrastructure concerns and lets them focus on the core business problems. This also means that developers are free to use the programming language best suited for their solution. Python has typically been the go-to language when it comes to AI/ML solutions, but there is more flexibility in this area. In this post you will see how to leverage the Go programming language to use Vector Databases and techniques such as Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) with langchaingo. If you are a Go developer who wants to how to build learn generative AI applications, you are in the right place!
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From Homemade HTTP Router to New ServeMux
net/http: add methods and path variables to ServeMux patterns Discussion about ServeMux enhancements
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Building a Playful File Locker with GoFr
Make sure you have Go installed https://go.dev/.
- Fastest way to get IPv4 address from string
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