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Since this project does not publish its source-code, or publish its binaries on an official store-front, I feel the need to call out to be aware of malicious code.


I think it's the first time I see a Github repo used as a sort of advertisement (without actual code – there's plenty of performative OSS out there).

The whole thing feels more clumsy than malicious, but without any in-use video I'm still suspicious.

My first thought is "post it on Github and share it on HackerNews" is a thing ChatGPT would advise to someone asking how to promote an app they built.


Full disclosure: I am the secretary of Belgian's largest D&D non-profit organization organizing weekly sessions for around 200 players a month.

We do everything we can to make new players feel welcome and have built a very warm and inclusive community that we can be proud of.

Playing with complete strangers can be scary, but I cannot describe the beauty of seeing a new face return every week and completely bloom open and make new friends. It's - pun not intended - magical.

I would argue that taking the dive and try it out is the best thing you can do. All we can do is make you as comfortable as possible.

All you need is a good community. Let's all make that possible!


I'm not into D&D, but I've seen similar things with other non-D&D local groups, like poker and HAM radio. You stop by as The Newbie, and you're greeted by a big group of people who already know each other and have their own pre-formed cliques. Yes, there are always a handful of people who seem to be the designated "do everything we can to make you welcome" committee, but the newbies end up only hanging out with them, and not any of the insular "core" groups.


Depends on the community I believe. I can only talk about how we are experiencing things, but all our players are really just happy to share the love for the hobby.

We have several things that helps break the "core group" problem in our case:

- We have several tables playing the same part of the adventure just with different players. This helps our players try out different DMs and their specific style of DMing as well as different player groups.

Did you not like the social interaction you had with a specific group? Just ask to be seated at a different table and try out a different vibe.

- We also organize regular (special) events. But D&D related an non-D&D related. This breaks down the "we're just here to play D&D" barrier but creating an actual community. We sometimes go for drinks, bowling etc.

- We actually encourage players to form their own groups outside of our D&D organized plays. And this is actually what we see happening. Players come in and play the campaign for a year and when the campaign concludes they just start their own private group and continue to play because they really like the group they are playing with.

Everything depends on the person of course, but all we can do is facilitate a nice and welcoming community.


We've got you covered!

https://sales-and-dungeons.app/


The fact that this was in part developed with the help of Facebook AI Research is kind of unsettling.

That said, the results are actually very impressive.


It's only unsettling if you are completely unfamiliar with the machine learning field. FAIR publishes research in many ML/AI fields. They're responsible for plenty of advances and contributions.


I’m not sure that’s what was meant by unsettling…


Kinda puts a spin on the "face" in "facebook"


It literally puts a spin on it, actually!


Didn’t Facebook just get sued for illegally harvesting faces & tags of people? If derivatives of that data make it into research like this, where does that stand from a legal perspective?



I've been following Citus Data, it might be interesting for you. https://www.citusdata.com/


It's not entirely clear from the website or the documentation, but this seems to be build exclusively for MySQL?


Yes we are MySQL compatible.


100% compatible? Is there a document with a compatibility matrix? Edit: I guess this is it: https://vitess.io/docs/reference/compatibility/mysql-compati....


I wonder if floating IPs can offer a solution here, combined with multi-cloud LBs?


Same here, we use Knex.js Querybuilder to build queries and fallback to `knex.raw()` for very specific SQL queries.


Ah, coincidence... Knex is the one I've been using too :-)


Auth0 has a nice article about the differences here: https://auth0.com/blog/2014/01/07/angularjs-authentication-w...

And you can play around with it using their interactive tool: http://jwt.io


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