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Comment by 🚀 stack

Re: "engineering for slow internet"

In: s/Gemini

Oddly, businesses considered 'marginal' in current capitalist regime are the only remaining free market businesses. They are not given free money by banks and politicians, and have to compete for and appreciate their customers. For capitalist enterprises, customers are a ticket to the printing press party, a necessary burden.

🚀 stack

Jun 04 · 2 months ago

4 Later Comments ↓

🎵 xavi · Jun 04 at 19:59:

Back when I used Nextcloud, the *login page alone* would fetch +17 MiB of data over 44 HTTP requests, 13 of which were JavaScript files. This would load horribly slow on less powerful hardware, such as the PinePhone.

This was in fact one of the reasons why I ragequit Nextcloud and wrote my own solution, slcl:

— slcl, a small and lightweight cloud

In comparison, slcl fetches 1.36 *KiB* (99.99% less!) in 2 HTTP requests: 1 for the HTML, and 1 for the CSS. And, in the end, both login pages are doing the exact same thing: ask me for a username and password.

🚀 stack · Jun 04 at 20:36:

Xcl is the convention for naming Common Lisp implementations -- sbcl, ccl, cmucl... Looks cool, although I prefer to stay away from clouds...

🎵 xavi · Jun 04 at 21:24:

@stack: it makes sense to stay away from cloud providers that you do not have control over, for obvious reasons. But, of course, in this case I self-host my own slcl instance on my own hardware, so there are no privacy concerns here.

For me and my family and friends, slcl has been a lifesaver. Nextcloud would otherwise hog as many resources as it could and clog the whole machine on simple operations, like searching a file or displaying thumbnails.

🚀 stack · Jun 04 at 22:20:

@xavi Yes, of course! Congrats on making a useful tool and thank you for making it available (and not using some insane language of the day).

Original Post

🌒 s/Gemini

engineering for slow internet — this text tells details about how is it to use modern web with limited internet. gemini & geminispace would be useful, given the current bloat of the web. but it's not all, the engineering of many day-to-day tasks, like system updates, are done by the assumptions that the internet speed is high. also, it is interesting, that when the space is not densely populated, it doesn't worth to invest in that space, even if it is a cyberspace. (:

💬 norayr · 12 comments · 1 like · Jun 02 · 3 months ago