We at @GitCitadel have now imported half of Project Gutenberg to our #Orly 🦉 relay (actively developed and supported by @mleku).
You can see my branch on:
https://git.imwald.eu/silberengel/next.orly.dev
The second-half import will start tonight (it's a lot!). Then we start importing Wikipedia, in the various languages offered. We'll look for more data sources, after that. Will be millions of mid-sized events, once we're done. If you want to be an #Alexandria Library mirror, you might need to pimp your hardware, but you won't have to increase your event size-limits.
Our relay admin @cloud fodder is going to host our first full mirror on wss://theforest.nostr1.com and you can then arrange streams, or whatever, with him. Our subscribers are making this good work possible! 🫶🏻
All of the items are in the public domain (no copyright) or are copyleft (we include a source tag and a clear notice that the source tag has to be maintained in a clone or fork). We will be regularly scanning the original sources for changes and updating the events. Once you have the basic set, you can just sync the updates. Also feel free to maintain a set of event forks, or to archive changes.
Our biggest challenge is now making the books easily discoverable, from any client that can render 30040 events, by juicing up relay searches with some high-tech engineering magic voodoo stuff. @semisol and @MichaelJ are both actively working on getting that going. ♥ Both of their systems are getting major updates. Expect cool stuff to get cool even harder.
🫡 That's all for now, and GM.
Silberengel
silberengel@gitcitadel.com
npub1l5sg...gx9z
Building jumble-imwald and the Alexandria library.
I'm such an incompetent manual tester, with such a toxic personality, and so incapable of learning new tasks or using computers, that my company is paying me to not-work, so that nobody else has to suffer spending a single minute interacting with me.
Remember this, the next time someone complains about their employees.
All of the people posting articles and books their bots have written are revealing that they don't regularly read high-quality literature or journalism.
Like those people who can't write well and post the drivel their bots have written, instead of their own notes. They can't tell that it's drivel.
They can't tell that their AI slop is AI slop.
Like the people who think ALDI sells the best wine.
Having a second/remote machine to test and work on is such an absolute game-changer, that I don't know how I got anything done, before.
> Social media is full of people who seem to have AI figured out. They post their workflows. Their productivity numbers. Their "I built this entire app in 2 hours with AI" threads. And you look at your own experience - the failed prompts, the wasted time, the code you had to rewrite - and you think: what's wrong with me?
>
> Nothing is wrong with you. Those threads are highlight reels. Nobody posts "I spent 3 hours trying to get Claude to understand my database schema and eventually gave up and wrote the migration by hand." Nobody posts "AI-generated code caused a production incident because it silently swallowed an error." Nobody posts "I'm tired."
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Siddhant Khare
AI fatigue is real and nobody talks about it · Siddhant Khare
You
@mleku
I just saw that #Orly 🦉has a Blossom server. I don't really know what to do with that, but I probably want to use it. What exactly is it for?
Anything to do with networking is harder than anything to do with programming and it has always been that way.
Because I said so.
I'm working on a big data dump onto my #Orly🦉relay.
FYI
Habemus client-upload compression. 😎 From 2,5 MB to 0,9 MB.
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