active-forks
datalevin
active-forks | datalevin | |
---|---|---|
18 | 15 | |
2,250 | 1,035 | |
- | 1.7% | |
1.8 | 9.6 | |
11 months ago | 1 day ago | |
JavaScript | Clojure | |
- | Eclipse Public License 1.0 |
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.
active-forks
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Microsoft is using malware-like pop-ups in Win11 to get people to ditch Chrome
2. accessing an app running on a windows through rdp, either as a full desktop or as a standalone window.[1] OK granted you are still using windows in that case, in the background, but you can do that only sporadically by launching a cloud windows vm instance for the small amount of time in a year you definitely need that dirty OS for personnal use.
Obviously YMMV but the barrier is mostly psychological imho.
[1] I think there was a project to facilitate that for office, adobe applications called winapps, see the different active forks here:
https://techgaun.github.io/active-forks/index.html#Fmstrat/w...
there is also this:
- Urgent!! -- Using YT-DLP in-place of Zoomdl
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Is there a way I can check the history "state" from all existing forks of a repo?
I know about https://github.com/techgaun/active-forks, however this "only" shows the time of last activity which is not too bad, but not exactly what I'd like to have, since this provides no indication on the (possible) progress of the project (if one could measure progress in units of commits)...
- Is Quil moving forward?
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How to see list of *active* forks?
I stumbled upon this tool: https://github.com/techgaun/active-forks. But it didn't help, it didn't work on my repo.
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Self-hosted in the cloud - What are your top apps?
It is abandoned for 4 years, found most active fork(nice tool) of this, which is up to date and have cutting edge tools awesome-foss/awesome-sysadmin
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Here's how to view active github forks of stable diffusion
Chrome: Bookmark any page > Click More > (change name) and paste code from https://github.com/techgaun/active-forks into URL section > Save
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SQLite Internals: Pages and B-trees
mentat was archived by mozilla back in 2017, but there are a bunch of forks. Because github is dumb and has a terrible interface for exploring forks [0], I used the Active GitHub Forks tool [1] that helped to find:
qpdb/mentat [2] seems to be the largest (+131 commits) and most recently modified (May this year) fork of mozilla/mentat.
[0]: https://github.com/mozilla/mentat/network/members - Seriously, how am I supposed to use this? Hundreds of entries, but no counts for stars, contributors, or commits, no details about recent commits. Just click every one?
[1]: https://techgaun.github.io/active-forks/index.html
[2]: https://github.com/qpdb/mentat
- Find all forks for any GitHub repo
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Sshfs Is Orphaned
Yeah, there is this tool: https://techgaun.github.io/active-forks/index.html
I'm really surprised Github doesn't leverage their data for better discovery. Instead you get forks that are second-class citizens and should never be used for active development. For example, they don't get watched by default and their code is not searchable.
datalevin
- Datalevin: A simple, fast and versatile Datalog database
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Is Datomic right for my use case?
You can also consider other durable Datalog options like datahike or datalevin which can work either as lib (SQLite style) or in a client-server setup; if you want to play with bi-temporality XTDB is a rock solid option with very good support and documentation.
- Datomic is free
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benefits of clojure for web development over Haskell
There are some Clojure-ecosystems things that are pretty cool, too, that you'd probably miss going into Haskell. lacinia is an extremely cool GraphQL library, and there are a variety of interesting datalog-based datastores which are spiritual descendents of Datomic, notably xtdb (formerly crux) and datalevin. Also as noted, you can write the front-end in ClojureScript if you want to, and there are a lot of cool libraries for that as well.
- SQLite Internals: Pages and B-trees
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Call for Help - Open Source Datom/EAV/Fact database in Rust.
There are plenty of open source Datomic Inspired databases. Check out https://github.com/juji-io/datalevin and scroll down all the way down to “Alternatives”. There was even the beginning of a rust one by Mozilla: https://github.com/mozilla/mentat
- Datalevin ships performant fulltext search for its KV and Datalog stores
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T-Wand: Beat Lucene in Less Than 600 Lines of Code
The benchmarks in question have several implementation issues, I reported them on GitHub.
https://github.com/juji-io/datalevin/issues/created_by/caval...
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Choice of NoSQL database: XTDB vs MongoDB
Highly recommend you give https://github.com/juji-io/datalevin a chance. You can use it both as a key-value and/or relational datalog store (like datomic) but it’s very simple to set up and blazing fast!
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Ask HN: Why are relational DBs are the standard instead of graph-based DBs?
Unlike some other commenters, I agree that graph models are usually a better fit for most data than relational models. There's been some interesting work in recent years developing this idea: in the Clojure world there's Datomic, XTDB, and a host of competitors, all of which build on work from Semantic Web/SPARQL/triplestores and logic programming. Some are even intended to be used as primary datastores: they support some amount of schema and constraints, have well-defined consistency and ACID guarantees, etc. This makes them unlike graph databases like Neo4J and others, which fill an architectural role more like Elasticsearch as a read-optimization tool. Here's an interesting talk making a case for triple-based databases.
What are some alternatives?
murder - Large scale server deploys using BitTorrent and the BitTornado library
xtdb - An immutable database for application development and time-travel data compliance, with SQL and XTQL. Developed by @juxt
Better-Github-Forks - Script for finding good forks of any project on Github
datahike - A durable Datalog implementation adaptable for distribution.
useful-forks.github.io - Improving GitHub's Forks list discoverability through automatic filtering. The project offers an online tool and a Chrome extension.
datascript - Immutable database and Datalog query engine for Clojure, ClojureScript and JS
github-profile-readme-generator - 🚀 Generate GitHub profile README easily with the latest add-ons like visitors count, GitHub stats, etc using minimal UI.
Apache AGE - Graph database optimized for fast analysis and real-time data processing. It is provided as an extension to PostgreSQL. [Moved to: https://github.com/apache/age]
murder - Large scale server deploys using BitTorrent and the BitTornado library (NOTE: project no longer maintained)
asami - A graph store for Clojure and ClojureScript
iptv - Collection of publicly available IPTV channels from all over the world [UnavailableForLegalReasons - Repository access blocked]
grakn - TypeDB: the polymorphic database powered by types