ts-odd
awesome-wasm-langs
ts-odd | awesome-wasm-langs | |
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10 | 28 | |
178 | 4,040 | |
0.0% | - | |
4.6 | 6.7 | |
7 months ago | 19 days ago | |
TypeScript | ||
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.
ts-odd
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TBD Web5
Interesting!
Seems to have a fair bit of crossover with what the Fission team is doing. Yesterday I stumbled upon a web page re: a presentation[1] that a key Fission dev/founder (former Ethereum Core Dev) will be making in late September:
I ended up spending some time playing with Fission Drive[2] and looking at their Guide[3], and just generally reading their dev[4] and marketing materials[5].
Anyway, looking at the Web5 site, it seem to strike some of the same notes.
I'm not affiliated with or participating with Fission in any way, but am working as part of a team developing a decentralized storage protocol focused on durability.
[1] https://www.thestrangeloop.com/2022/a-distributed-file-syste...
[2] https://drive.fission.codes/
[3] https://guide.fission.codes/
[4] https://github.com/fission-suite
[5] https://fission.codes/
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Fun with Rust
Currently, I work at fission.codes, and I have to say, it’s right up my alley. I wasn’t expecting to get the job. In fact, I didn’t really take the application seriously. But to my surprise, the CEO reached out to me to schedule a call, which I missed. I was really tired that day, so I slept off. I reached out to the CEO apologizing for missing the call, and trying to reschedule. Thankfully, he did. The interview went smoothly, and I got the job.
- IPFS that looks like dropbox
- Build the future of web apps at the edge – Fission
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“With HTTP, you search for locations. With IPFS, you search for content.”
Note that the Filecoin network (which was designed to be the incentive layer for IPFS storage) has been operational for some time. If you look at the current status at https://file.app/ , you can see that storage costs there are extremely low for large amounts of data. f you can get your data verified as open, public data by applying for datacap with a Filecoin+ notary, it's currently free. See https://plus.fil.org/ (you can get 32GB of free datacap to play with just for having a github account).
If you want to use the Filecoin network as a "provider of last resort" for IPFS data, there's https://estuary.tech which will mark your data as verified, sort out the deals with storage providers, and then mirror it to IPFS.
There's also third-party tools like https://fission.codes/ , https://docs.textile.io/powergate/ , https://web3.storage/ and https://www.pinata.cloud/ for making this easier.
(Disclosure: I work at the Filecoin Foundation.)
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Going doorless
There are several technical affordances to this at the moment. Local-first or edge apps enable the whole experience to take place in the security of one's own device and can continue offline without internet connection. Zero Data protocols like remoteStorage, Fission, and Solidobviate the need to create accounts (because people bring their own data storage) and also enable apps as swappable lenses—"software is the principles of an experience" (as Steve Jobs might have said) and your data becomes the details. Sharing content via URI fragment stores data in the link itself so that no 3rd-party server is necessary to hold the data (for example, a multi-platform music playlist).
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How are files kept private on the Filecoin network?
You have to encrypt your own files. But there are solutions in the works! In the Filecoin Ecosystem check out https://fission.codes
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Private file collection
Check out https://fission.codes they have a private drive
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IPFS and ACL
Or check out and the Webnative SDK that we've built all this into: https://github.com/fission-suite/webnative
awesome-wasm-langs
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Wasm-bpf: Build and run eBPF programs in WebAssembly
Cross-language support for over 30 programming languages for eBPF user space programs
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I think [...] the "future of computing" is going to be [...] CISC. I’ve read of IBM mainframes that have [hardware instructions for] parsing XML [...]; if you had garbage collection, bounds checking, and type checking in hardware, you’d have fewer and smaller instructions that achieved just as much.
wot
- Why are there no or very few Blazor jobs?
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Nvidia Security Team: “What if we just stopped using C?”
Just about every language can compile or transpile to WASM:
https://github.com/appcypher/awesome-wasm-langs
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Build a Shopify Function using AssemblyScript
There are also curated lists of languages that compile down to Wasm available on Github, so there is a ton of opportunity to choose your own adventure.
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We're working on a new WASM/Rust scripting system. Here I'm playing around with a script that changes the day/night cycle.
My current plans are to investigate TinyGo / C# NativeAOT-LLVM / other languages that can compile to Wasm once our host side stabilises a little bit (lots of churn right now!)
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'The best thing we can do today to JavaScript is to retire it,' says JSON creator Douglas Crockford
Yeah, it's pretty cool. Here's a nice list of all the repositories and stuff like that
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helix - A post-modern modal text editor
It’s planned to use WASM, which would allow to use basically any language you’d want (ok, any lang having a WASM compiler or VM), including Lua.
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Fun with Rust
While waiting for placement at Andela, I started something. I wanted to create a community of developers who had already worked on WebAssembly projects in the past. A bit of a back story is in order now. During my exploratory phase before I settled for web development, Web Assembly was announced. So on a whim, I created a Repo to keep track of languages that compile to web assembly. The repo ended up getting over three thousand stars. I honestly didn’t expect it to blow up as much as it did, but it did. That feat fueled my interest in Web Assembly. As I was saying, I wanted to gather Web Assembly developers together for a purpose - to create a common web assembly runtime, a canonical runtime. My attempt at community building didn’t go so well. I sent a couple of emails, and DMs to no avail, or so I thought. It was during this time that Syrus Akbary reached out to me, he pitched the idea he had to build an awesome web assembly runtime, Wasmer, and that he would want me to be involved. He was really excited, and so was I. The only thing was that he said he had to lay down some of the groundwork first. So he worked on it for about a month. Now that I think about it, I should have stuck to him while he laid down the work because when he showed me the progress he had made, I was awe-stricken, but also disadvantaged. A lot of work had been done. Here we were trying to build the web assembly runtime that would take the world by storm, but my knowledge of Rust was meager. Keeping up was hard. Eventually, I had to leave the project, he was incorporating Wasmer as a company, so relocation was being discussed but I wasn’t interested in going to the US. But I think the major deciding factor for me was that I didn’t really align with the management of the project.
- GNO airdrop, what's your thoughts and opinion on it?
What are some alternatives?
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
solidity - Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language
developer-guide - Github mirror of our developer documentation at https://docs.siasky.net/
Scala.js - Scala.js, the Scala to JavaScript compiler
podmaster - WebPods Pod Server in Node.JS
Flutter - Flutter makes it easy and fast to build beautiful apps for mobile and beyond
arweave - The Arweave server and App Developer Toolkit.
metamask-extension - :globe_with_meridians: :electric_plug: The MetaMask browser extension enables browsing Ethereum blockchain enabled websites
iiab - Internet-in-a-Box - Build your own LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA with a Raspberry Pi !
bsc - A BNB Smart Chain client based on the go-ethereum fork
notes - IPFS Collaborative Notebook for Research
biowasm - WebAssembly modules for genomics