atomic-server
glicol
atomic-server | glicol | |
---|---|---|
15 | 132 | |
806 | 2,003 | |
7.6% | - | |
9.5 | 8.0 | |
10 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT 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.
atomic-server
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[Help] Atomic Data installation and configuration
Reading through https://atomicdata.dev/ seemed like a good option for notes/cms with collaboration.
- A proposed standard for modeling and exchanging linked data
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The Semantic Web is Dead - Long Live the Semantic Web!
Great read, wholeheartedly agree with your sentiments! We need to combine the vision of a web of linked data with the practicality of JSON. I think you’ll like Atomic Data, a project that I’ve been working on for almost three years now. It’s a modular specification that takes a strict subset of RDF to make it highly compatible with json. I’ve also written quite a bit of docs and some implementations, such as a server (written in rust) and a data browser (similar to notion), as well as a bunch of libraries.
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Is there an example app that uses Sled database in Rust?
I use sled in Atomic Server. Here's the actual sled usage.
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What’s everyone working on this week (9/2022)?
Working on Atomic-Server, a graph database / CMS for sharing structured data and schemas. Currently, I’m working on a CRDT implementation - trying to have conflict-free event-sourced version control system. Kind of harder than I thought!
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Why Decentralization Matters (2021) - Big tech companies were built off the backbone of a free and open internet. Now, they are doing everything they can to make sure no one can compete with them [00:14:25]
So for the past few years, I've been working on a new open specification, called Atomic Data. It takes inspiration from the semantic web, but is far more practical in its design and easier to use. Instead of only writing a spec, I also wrote a server / database, a client (browser GUI), and various libraries - all open source.
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Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend | Tauri Studio
I've made a Database with a GUI, and Tauri helped me to make the desktop build. It's really promising project. It's very flexible in how you use it - I'm currently using its async runtime to run my Rust Actix server, and using the WebView to render a React app. Being able to easily create a desktop tray icon with actions is pretty cool. I'm really looking forward to Android + iOS support.
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Publish and deploy semantic contents
I'm currently writing an open source database + server that helps with this process (it creates subject pages, gives you a Gui, serializes to RDF and other formats), called atomic-server. I think using this is currently the fastest way to get linked data deployed to the semantic web!
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The metaverse could let Silicon Valley track your facial expressions, blood pressure, and your breathing rates — showing exactly why our internet laws need updating
I'll just take this opportunity to promote an open source, decentralised database that I've been working on, called Atomic-Server. It's fast (written in rust), features built in full text search, authorisation, dynamic forms, and it runs on low end hardware. It features a new specification called Atomic Data that combines the best of json, rdf and type safety.
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What's everyone working on this week (44/2021)?
I'm working on adding authentication to atomic-server, an open source graph database with dynamic, decentralized schema validation.
glicol
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3 years of fulltime Rust game development, and why we're leaving Rust behind
I've worked on Ambient Engine and now on the Bevy engine. I totally agree with these points, very valuable. I only make some comments from my professional (audio) perspective:
We need the highlight author's affirmation of cli. Rust's tui (ratatui) is great. I used it to make Glicol-cli [1]. If you are a Linux user, you are welcome to test the music production of the code.
Speaking of game audio, I actually think rust is perfect for audio. I have also continued to develop Glicol recently, and my recent goal (starting tomorrow) is the bevy_glicol plug-in. I want to solve bevy's audio problem on the browser.
All in all, even though I've had my share of pain with ecs, I still think rust is very valuable for game and app development, maybe not multiplayer AAA, maybe practical apps.
[1] https://github.com/glicol/glicol-cli
[2] https://github.com/chaosprint/glicol
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Show HN: Render audio to HTML canvas using WebGPU
Nice! Great project website styling and demo.
I had a WebGPU scope demo using vanila JS here, but it's not connected to AudioContext at all.
https://stackblitz.com/edit/vitejs-vite-cuc9vs
Still, I had to use the old WebGL solution for https://glicol.org since the WebGPU support seems to be pretty slow at the moment.
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AI-generated sad girl with piano performs the text of the MIT License
Suno is great and I already shared its potential back in v2. I have always believed that the essence of digital music is "organized numbers". I think what needs to be thought about is how to use AI in this process. If you look at the results (numbers) generated, then we are indeed very close. But there is another future I believe: I hope AI can compose music with me, like copilot. This is why I keep working on
https://glicol.org/
and the destination is:
https://github.com/chaosprint/RaveForce
Also want to hear your feedback.
- Strudel: A live coding platform to write dynamic music pieces in the browser
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Velato: A programming language where source code must be a valid MIDI music file
Interesting!
Similar note-based expression can be found on TidalCycles/Strudel. although it's not valid MIDI format anymore, you can use notation like c4, f3, and make them as "pattern". Samples are also supported in the same manner:
https://strudel.cc/
And in my project Glicol, I use only numbers in the seq node. So 60 means middle C. Underscore means rest.
https://glicol.org/
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We were not accepted into Google Summer of Code. So, we started our own
I also applied with Glicol (https://glicol.org/) and got rejected, which is totally understandable. I am basically working this project on my own with almost zero extra funding.
I am currently working on a new website. The old stack is Vite, Svelte and Windi CSS (discontinued unfortunately). So this time maybe Astro + Solid + Tailwind.
And I am also trying to rewrite the whole Rust backend if possible, so there is quite some work to be done.
Let me know on GH or Discord if you are interested.
It's a good chance to try Rust, WASM, DSP, etc.
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My Sixth Year as a Bootstrapped Founder
This is a really informative and inspiring article.
It hasn’t been 6 months (not 6 years) since I quit my full-time job as a Rust developer to start my own business.
As time goes by, I can feel the pressure of mortgage and car loans, and I can also feel the care and pressure of my family.
My original plan was to make an interface for Glicol (https://glicol.org), and to develop relevant hardware with firmware written in rust for school education.
I sent some cold emails to VCs, but most of them got no reply.
I also sent an email to the Norwegian Museum of Science and Technology, offering to perform for children for free, but they didn’t reply for two months. I shamelessly sent it again, and someone finally replied with a rejection.
Only one VC talked to me and thought that I should convince and validate a partner first, and he suggested that I go to an incubator.
Very good advice.
Later I learned that even Norwegian education startups skipped Norway and focused directly on the US market.
People from the incubator also told me that it is impossible for Norwegian schools to accept new things independently.
This is very enlightening to me because most of Glicol's visitors are indeed from the US. And it took me so long to discover this fact.
But if I don’t start, I’ll never get past those six months.
- How Programming Languages Got Their Names
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Ask HN: Yo wants to build a game, I'm lost. What can I do?
I picked up LOGO when I was 6 and leant Pascal and C later.
I didn't program for a few years because I wasn't interested in competitions. So I think interest is the most important, otherwise it will be easy to get lost and give up.
Later, I became very interested in programming, mainly because I came into contact with music technology.
I think since your child is interested in game development, it is a good choice to start step by step. For example, starting with threejs. I also recommend learning Rust and Bevy so you learn the underlying layers and ECS.
Last but not least, although it's not related to games dev but I sincerely invite you and your son to try Glicol (https://glicol.org), the project that I am developing.
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I quit my job to work full time on my open source project [Atuin]
I quite my job as well to work on
https://glicol.org
I have a lot of feelings, but I don't have a blog so far. But one of my feelings is that universities should alloc some of their funding to many of these open source projects and open source community should be better managed rather than donation. My plan is to start my own company and work on hardware .
What are some alternatives?
CubeSimRS - Rust based Rubik's Cube simulation and solving library.
Sonic Pi - Code. Music. Live.
awesome-wasm-langs - 😎 A curated list of languages that compile directly to or have their VMs in WebAssembly
supercollider - An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition.
roaring-rs - A better compressed bitset in Rust
kaleidosync - A WebGL Spotify visualizer made with Vue, D3, and Three.js.
cargo-mutants - :zombie: Inject bugs and see if your tests catch them!
soundboard - Simple soundboard app with MIDI control
rust-rocksdb - rust wrapper for rocksdb
vst-rs - VST 2.4 API implementation in rust. Create plugins or hosts. Previously rust-vst on the RustDSP group.
tree-flat - TreeFlat is the simplest way to build & traverse a pre-order Tree in Rust
typebeat - Keyboard-controlled music sequencer, sampler, and synth