Yes. The interaction with the Rust Foundation is described in the linked RFC.
The Council is responsible for establishing the process for selecting Project directors. The Project directors are the mechanism by which the Rust Project's interests are reflected on the Rust Foundation board.
The Council delegates a purview to the Project directors to represent the Project's interests on the Foundation Board and to make certain decisions on Foundation-related matters. The exact boundaries of that purview are out of scope for this RFC.
I may never have mastered vim but in Winamp 2 I had Q (queue) and J (jump to & alt-Q queue) absolutely nailed. Even with my peasantlike 15k tracks I felt like a boss navigating around my collection-as-a-playlist in split-second bursts of keyboard scrabbling. Sadly these shortcuts didn't make it into Winamp 5. Ever since, it's always struck me how popular music player UIs have become slower - doing the equivalent search/queue in Spotify or Apple Music might require the mouse and waiting for loading spinners.
I suspect parent was talking about the number of subscribers to the Rust community on each server (currently 174 on P.D, 591 on lemmyrs). Which server people choose as the "home base" for their account so to speak is an interesting reflection of that server's maturity/impact but not the major driver of community activity.
In the interest of sparking a little discussion (not too spicy please, we're having a nice clean start here) I thought I would ask the question. It's something I'm legitimately wondering about as someone who has reached for tokio by default for years....
I am enamored with the idea of SDF, and I think it is an important part of computing history and the present. That being said, I am curious as to whether anyone actually finds it useful—aside from the fact that it hosts the instance!!
I've been around since 2009. Nowadays they host my blog, plus it's handy to have a unix/linux shell somewhere else on the internet for testing things, particularly not being behind NAT. I've been intending to start putting code on the Gitea instance - I probably need to follow up about getting an account. Also it's fun to drop into bboard, anonradio etc. sometimes. :)
Ranges (C++20) (euroquis.nl)
Improved API tokens for crates.io (blog.rust-lang.org)
New SUSE Music Parodies
Free Software (Free Fallin' by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPM_RUVahIc...
rustfmt update 1.5.3 - 2023-06-20 (github.com)
Look out for your linter if you're tracking nightly. :)
Introducing the Rust Leadership Council (blog.rust-lang.org)
bash.org on Napster (bash.org)
CANYON.MID (canyonmid.com)
Winamp (www.youtube.com)
It really whips the llama's ass.
Uh oh! (www.youtube.com)
Your sound card works perfectly. (lemmy.sdf.org)
Consolidating on one Lemmy instance
cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/24889...
Advantages of async runtimes other than tokio?
In the interest of sparking a little discussion (not too spicy please, we're having a nice clean start here) I thought I would ask the question. It's something I'm legitimately wondering about as someone who has reached for tokio by default for years....
What Do You Use SDF For?
I am enamored with the idea of SDF, and I think it is an important part of computing history and the present. That being said, I am curious as to whether anyone actually finds it useful—aside from the fact that it hosts the instance!!