atomic-server
hotwire
atomic-server | hotwire | |
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15 | 5 | |
822 | 222 | |
9.4% | - | |
9.5 | 0.0 | |
9 days ago | about 2 years 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.
hotwire
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What's everyone working on this week (44/2021)?
Published version 0.2.0 of my rust gtk app that allows to capture and display http, http2 and postgresql network traffic: https://github.com/emmanueltouzery/hotwire
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new rust/gtk3 wireshark-like application to capture and view http/http2/postgres wire traffic
OP here. I also have in hotwire an imperfect API to register message parsers (protocol support for http, http2, pgsql, ...). I was fighting a little the rust typesystem on on that one. I opened an issue on the github repo with some explanations, if someone has suggestions, I'd be interested: https://github.com/emmanueltouzery/hotwire/issues/1
- Hotwire - A Simple Way To Examine Network Traffic of a Few Popular Protocols
What are some alternatives?
CubeSimRS - Rust based Rubik's Cube simulation and solving library.
livewire - A full-stack framework for Laravel that takes the pain out of building dynamic UIs.
awesome-wasm-langs - 😎 A curated list of languages that compile directly to or have their VMs in WebAssembly
pyshark - Python wrapper for tshark, allowing python packet parsing using wireshark dissectors
roaring-rs - A better compressed bitset in Rust
rust-rocksdb - rust wrapper for rocksdb
cargo-mutants - :zombie: Inject bugs and see if your tests catch them!
lila-openingexplorer - Opening explorer for lichess.org that can handle all the variants and trillions of unique positions
sniffglue - Secure multithreaded packet sniffer
tree-flat - TreeFlat is the simplest way to build & traverse a pre-order Tree in Rust
axum - Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper