polkadot
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rust
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polkadot | rust | |
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143 | 9 | |
7,026 | 4,954 | |
- | 2.3% | |
9.7 | 5.2 | |
7 months ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
polkadot
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Projects to contribute to
Polkadot (6400 GitHub Stars) https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot
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There are 43 active parachains on Polkadot, not counting private ones, and 130 total announced projects headed for parachain status. When is the relay chain going to be upgraded to handle more than 100 parachains?
I don't think asynchronous backing has any direct effect on the number of parachains, no (I mean, there likely is an effect, but it's not the goal and my understanding is that any effect on that would be minimal, although I'm not involved in the deep engineering here). It increases throughput, correct, by decreasing the time between blocks by not needing to do a "roundtrip" to the relay chain to build new blocks. See https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/issues/3779 for an overview.
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Polkadot Digest 17 Jan 2023
Specifically, it was this PR that changed it: https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/pull/6230
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Bill Laboon AMA 9 Dec 2022 - 14.00-15.00 UTC
A particular validator sent out a LOT of dispute reports (i.e., saying that other validators did something incorrectly) last night (for reasons unknown). It looks like other nodes "choked" reading all of these disputes, and one subsystem died, stalling nodes but NOT killing the process. It's still being investigated, but you can look at the issue on Github to see it being discussed here: https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/issues/6412
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Bill Laboon AMA - 11 November 14.00 - 15.00 UTC
Asynchronous backing- This might sound a bit dry, but it means that parachains can have increased throughput and double block production speed.
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10H polkadot substrate : Prepare a local parachain testnet
# Clone the Polkadot Repository, with correct version git clone --depth 1 --branch release-v0.9.24 https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot.git # Switch into the Polkadot directory cd polkadot # Build the relay chain Node cargo b -r
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Bill Laboon AMA - 2 Jun 13.00 - 14.00 UTC
An entirely new and more decentralized form of governance - see https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/pull/5205
This is obviously a very high-level description! For more detail, I recommend reading Gav's description in the Medium post here: https://medium.com/polkadot-network/xcm-the-cross-consensus-message-format-3b77b1373392 or if you really want to dig in, you can review the code here: https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/tree/59aa955576e963942c60e3ae8f8316444b66cafb/xcm
- Polkadot Digest 22 Apr 2022
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Energy Web chain code sources ?
otherwise this should be the github repository of parity, maybe you can find something there as well? https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot
rust
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Have you ever wanted a library to check for 69 in a string?
You can use Tensorflow for Rust to simplify that task and avoid pain with regex. Just have the right mindset.
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Making a better Tensorflow thanks to strong typing
What is the benefit of this compared to using bindings/a wrapper to Tensorflow, or other ML libraries written in C/C++, such as this community hosted project on tensorflow's github. If it's just for fun that is a valid enough reason imo, just curious since you describe it as a better Tensorflow because of the typing vs using the python wrapper, when there already exist ways to interact with tensorflow with both Rust and other statically typed languages, also including C++ (officially supported), C#, Haskell and Scala, as well as probably having bindings not mentioned on the documentation for more niche languages.
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Integrating machine learning models into Rust applications?
(3) You could use TensorFlow as your executor: https://github.com/tensorflow/rust
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Why Static Languages Suffer From Complexity
TensorFlow has language support for TypeScript well as Rust.
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Is PyO3 library production ready?
Thank you for the restponse! With tensorflow I am probably better of with something like; [tensorflow rust bindings](https://github.com/tensorflow/rust/tree/master/src). But I believe some useful extensions are still written in python for example; [TFDV](https://github.com/tensorflow/data-validation).. and how about scikit-learn or even something that is simpler like fb-prophet that is entirely written in python?
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How mature is the QT integration?
Tensorflow bindings exist, technically, but they're in a pretty rough state AFAIK.
- Feasibility of Using a Python Image Super Resolution Library in My Rust App
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Rusticles #10 - Wed Sep 09 2020
tensorflow/rust (Rust): Rust language bindings for TensorFlow
What are some alternatives?
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
leaf - Open Machine Intelligence Framework for Hackers. (GPU/CPU)
substrate - Substrate: The platform for blockchain innovators
anyhow - Flexible concrete Error type built on std::error::Error
Rustup - The Rust toolchain installer
rusty-machine - Machine Learning library for Rust
parity-signer - Air-gapped crypto wallet.
solana - Web-Scale Blockchain for fast, secure, scalable, decentralized apps and marketplaces.
CNTK - Wrapper around Microsoft CNTK library
coreutils - Cross-platform Rust rewrite of the GNU coreutils
ledger-kusama - Kusama app for Ledger Nano S and X
rustlearn - Machine learning crate for Rust