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Thanks I appreciate you taking the time to comment!

I wonder that too. I have been a reader for YEARS, lost access to my old account, so I am cautious about posting content here, as I know new low-post accounts are often seen as spammy, which is fair enough.


> I wonder that too. I have been a reader for YEARS, lost access to my old account, so I am cautious about posting content here, as I know new low-post accounts are often seen as spammy, which is fair enough.

Yea a lot of new accounts on Hackernews are indeed spammy, I am lucky that my account is old enough and hopefully verified enough within the community to not be considered AI now.

I hope that my comment gives your account any minor reputation because your work is fantastic within lowendvps's spaces and I wish to say to the hackernews community that tierhive's cheapest vps at 3$/yr is definitely a steal deal especially when as you have shown how much things can run within a lowend-vps

Have a nice day :)


The micro VPS is actually only 10 cents per month on Tierhive, so only $1.20 per year :)

I'm rocking one right now and it's surprisingly useful.


All the deep state stuff aside, I switched to 100% unprocessed meals for a month sometime ago after finding out I was becoming insulin resistant.

It worked I feel better and a few other things... My eye sight improved and my beard, leg and arm hair increased, noticeably.


I can't believe that article has no mention of SQLite ??


> I can't believe that article has no mention of SQLite ??

https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pavlo/blog/2026/01/2025-databases-re...


No MSSQL, DB2 or Oracle either. Anything this proven & stable is probably not worth blogging about in this context. SQLite gets a lot of attention on HN but that's a bit of an exception.


Same. CMD-F, 'sqlite', no hits, skip and go straight to comments.


Brilliant I will be adopting a few of these, I have been on a personal quest to reduce js use recently, I feel like I spend more time debugging js than producing the end result.


Yep and I have kept it really basic and simple, I just store them in a folder in /home/$user/music and let jukebox scan and catalogue and I keep a subset on my phone, really that simple.... And you know what, it feels great, but then again, I am old enough to fondly remember just listening to a Walkman and being blown away.


This sort of thing gives me a nice hit of nostalgia.

I am pleased things like this continue to exist on the tinterweb.


License arguments aside, pretty cool.


Probably is, nice that people who do other things apart from learning to code all day can get their ideas out of their heads.


Not so nice that those ideas are not production ready i.e. well tested and validated. Leading to all sorts of issues and headaches for the unsuspecting customer


Do you expect every public github repo to be "production ready"?

I think I have to take every single of mine down then, they're all made for me and do what I need them to do. There's zero consideration for "production" of any kind. It works on my machine and might work on yours.


If the repo is making releases on its public page, then yes, that literally implies production ready.


looks pretty cool, will add it to the never ending list of stuff to test


Give it a week, there will be a tool out of China that works just fine, the right to repair by brute force!


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