ts-odd
wasmer
ts-odd | wasmer | |
---|---|---|
10 | 131 | |
178 | 17,829 | |
0.0% | 1.2% | |
4.6 | 9.9 | |
7 months ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
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
wasmer
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Bebop v3: a fast, modern replacement to Protocol Buffers
This is awesome. I'd love to have upstream support in Wasmer ( https://wasmer.io )
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Unlocking the Power of WebAssembly
WebAssembly is extremely portable. WebAssembly runs on: all major web browsers, V8 runtimes like Node.js, and independent Wasm runtimes like Wasmtime, Lucet, and Wasmer.
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Show HN: dockerc – Docker image to static executable "compiler"
Unfortunately cosmopolitan wouldn't work for dockerc. Cosmopolitan works as long as you only use it but container runtimes require additional features. Also containers contain arbitrary executables so not sure how that would work either...
As for WASM, this is already possible using container2wasm[0] and wasmer[1]'s ability to generate static binaries.
[0]: https://github.com/ktock/container2wasm
[1]: https://wasmer.io/
- RustPython
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Howto: WASM runtimes in Docker / Colima
I could not find any guide how to add WASM container capability to Docker running on Colima. This guide provides a few Colima templates for exactly this, which adds WasmEdge, Wasmtime and Wasmer runtime types.
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Show HN: Mutable.ai – Turn your codebase into a Wiki
Just suggested as well Wasmer on Twitter! https://github.com/wasmerio/wasmer
Looking forward to seeing the results :)
- Jaq – A jq clone focused on correctness, speed, and simplicity
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Prettier $20k Bounty was Claimed
The Biome team has been incredibly fast on solving the challenge and achieving 95% compatibility with Prettier [1]
Just as a note, as it was not mentioned in the article, Wasmer [2] also participated with a $2,500 bounty to compile Biome to WASIX [3], and it has been awesome to see how their team has been working to achieve this as well... hopefully we'll get Biome running in Wasmer soon!
Keep up the great work!!
[1] https://github.com/biomejs/biome/issues/720
[2] https://wasmer.io/
[3] https://wasix.org/
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The Curse of Docker
It's funny how WebAssembly can help overcome most of the issues mentioned on the blogpost (packaging, configuration, portability) if addressed properly.
That's the main reason Wasmer [1] was created :)
[1] https://wasmer.io
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Bring garbage collected programming languages efficiently to WebAssembly
Thanks for the mention to Wasmer.
I'll put here a link in case is useful for future readers: https://wasmer.io/
What are some alternatives?
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
wasmtime - A fast and secure runtime for WebAssembly
developer-guide - Github mirror of our developer documentation at https://docs.siasky.net/
SSVM - WasmEdge is a lightweight, high-performance, and extensible WebAssembly runtime for cloud native, edge, and decentralized applications. It powers serverless apps, embedded functions, microservices, smart contracts, and IoT devices.
podmaster - WebPods Pod Server in Node.JS
wasm3 - 🚀 A fast WebAssembly interpreter and the most universal WASM runtime
arweave - The Arweave server and App Developer Toolkit.
quickjs-emscripten - Safely execute untrusted Javascript in your Javascript, and execute synchronous code that uses async functions
iiab - Internet-in-a-Box - Build your own LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA with a Raspberry Pi !
awesome-wasm-runtimes - A list of webassemby runtimes
notes - IPFS Collaborative Notebook for Research
wasm-bindgen - Facilitating high-level interactions between Wasm modules and JavaScript