Of the thousands, a handful will prevail. Most of it is vaporware, just like in any boom. Every single industry has this problem; copy-cats, fakes & frauds.
"Buy my fancy oil for your coal shovel and the coal will turn into gold. If you pay for premium, you don't have to shovel yourself."
If everything goes right, there won't be a coal mine needed.
Remember that games are just simulations. Physics, light, sound, object boundaries - it not real, just a rough simulation of the real thing.
You can say that ML/AI/LLM's are also just very distilled simulations. Except they simulate text, speech, images, and some other niche models. It is still very rough around the edges - meaning that even though it seems intelligent, we know it doesn't really have intelligence, emotions and intentions.
Just as game simulations are 100% biased towards what the game developers, writers and artists had in mind, AI is also constrained to the dataset they were trained on.
Combination of partitioning + sharding perhaps? Often times its is only a handful of tables that grows large, so even less so for a single large customer, thus sharding that customer out and then partitioning the data by a common/natural boundary should get you 90% there. Majority of data can be partitioned, and it doesn't have to be by date - it pays dividends to go sit with the data and reflect what is being stored, its read/write pattern and its overall shape, to determine where to slice the partitions best. Sometimes splitting a wide table into two or three smaller tables can work if your joins aren't too frequent or complex. Can also help if you can determine which of the rows can be considered hot or cold, so you move the colder/hotter data to a separate tables to speed up read/writes. There are always opportunities for storage optimization large datasets but it does take time & careful attention to get it right.
Orleans is pretty cool! The project has matured nicely over the years (been something like 10 years?) and they have some research papers attached to it if you like reading up on the details. The nuget stats indicate a healthy amount of downloads too, more than one might expect.
One of the single most important things I've done in my career was going down the Actor Model -framework rabbit hole about 8 or 9 years ago, read a bunch of books on the topic, that contained a ton of hidden philosophy, amazing reasoning, conversations about real-time vs eventual consistency, Two-Generals-Problem - just a ton of enriching stuff, ways to think about data flows, the direction of the flow, immutability, event-logged systems and on and on. At the time CQS/CQRS was making heavy waves and everyone tried to implement DDD & Event-based (and/or service busses - tons of nasty queues...) and Actor Model (and F# for that matter) was such clean fresh breath of air from all the Enterprise complexity.
Would highly recommend going this path for anyone with time on their hands, its time well spent. I still call on that knowledge frequently even when doing OOP.
Not books, but some inspiring resources. FModel [0] is a set of patterns for functional reactive DDD on the basis of event sourcing. In particular the Decider pattern is a great way to model aggregates, and test them using Scenario's that read like Gherkin in code (given.. when.. then). Combines well with actors to represent aggregates.
On the BEAM used by Erlang, Elixir, and Gleam actors are called processes, and this guide [1] delves into domain modeling with them.
Applied Akka Patterns by Michael Nash, Wade Waldron (Oreilly) was very digestible and relevant at the time, might be dated by now. Just read the intro to get the vibe.
These days I would recommend picking a framework and then ask claude & friends to do a deep dive with you and build an example project out. Ask it to explain concepts, architecture, trade-offs, scalability considerations, hosting considerations, compare it with other frameworks, hook it up to storage systems (sqlite, postgresql, blob storage) and so on. Try running them within a wireguard network and so on. Very interesting learning to be found.
I was disappointed when MS discontinued Axum, which I found pleasant to use and thought the language based approach was nicer than a library based solution like Orleans.
The Axum language had `domain` types, which could contain one or more `agent` and some state. Agents could have multiple functions and could share domain state, but not access state in other domains directly. The programming model was passing messages between agents over a typed `channel` using directional infix operators, which could also be used to build process pipelines. The channels could contain `schema` types and a state-machine like protocol spec for message ordering.
It didn't have "classes", but Axum files could live in the same projects as regular C# files and call into them. The C# compiler that came with it was modified to introduce an `isolated` keyword for classes, which prevented them from accessing `static` fields, which was key to ensuring state didn't escape the domain.
The software and most of the information was scrubbed from MS own website, but you can find an archived copy of the manual[1]. I still have a copy of the software installer somewhere but I doubt it would work on any recent Windows.
Sadly this project was axed before MS had embraced open source. It would've been nice if they had released the source when the decided to discontinue working on it.
You need some Ayahuasca or large does of some friendly fungi... You might be surprised to discover the nature your soul and what is capable of. The Soul, the mind, the body, the thinking patterns - are re-programmable and very sensitive to suggestion. It is near impossible to be non-reactive to input from the external world (and thus mutation). The soul even more so. It is utterly flexible & malleable. You can CHOOSE to be rigid and closed off, and your soul will obey that need.
Remember, the Soul is just a human word, a descriptor & handle for the thing that is looking through your eyes with you. For it time doesn't exist. It is a curious observer (of both YOU and the universe outside you). Utterly neutral in most cases, open to anything and everything. It is your greatest strength, you need only say Hi to it and start a conversation with it. Be sincere and open yourself up to what is within you (the good AND the bad parts). This is just the first step. Once you have a warm welcome, the opening-up & conversation starts to flow freely and your growth will sky rocket. Soon you might discover that there are not just one of them in your but multiples, each being different natures of you. Your mind can switch between them fluently and adapt to any situation.
It actually explains a lot about why religions, psy-ops, placebo's, mass-hysteria/psychosis, cults and even plain old marketing works. Feels like I took a peek behind the curtain.
Can't wait to have a game that can be an all-in-one game: rpg, roleplaying, rts, space, orcs, magic, cyberworlds with infinite story lines/worlds, items, dialogs etc. Ready Player One vibes.
Like I want to take my skyrim character, drop it into Diablo 2, then drop Diablo (the demon) into Need for Speed, then have my need for speed car show up on another planet and upgrade it into a space ship, while the space ship takes me to fight some mega aliens. All while offering a coherent & unique experience. As you play, the game saves major forks in your story & game genre, so you can invite/share your game recipe with other humans to enjoy.
Also, when are we getting a new Spore game? This game is a sleeping giant waiting to be awaken.
I wonder when Americans will wake up and see their system for what it is. It is almost too late to fix it. What comes next is going to change the rest of our lives (everyone, the whole world).
A large number of people don’t want the existing system.
They want Jesus on the throne, enforcing morality and making sure the poor people to work instead of being lazy grifters that take good people’s hard-earned money.
This isn’t a hot take. I’m a Christian who grew up that community. :(
It’s everywhere. And I hate what they are
doing to my LGBTQ friends.
Now run the same kinds of tests while listening to music, meditation, sleep, orgasm, psychoactive substances (including caffeine/alcohol/nicotine), during simulated stress event (hard slap in the face?), on different age groups, genders, races. Perhaps there are more than one version or definition of "You" that arises in certain circumstances.
"Buy my fancy oil for your coal shovel and the coal will turn into gold. If you pay for premium, you don't have to shovel yourself."
If everything goes right, there won't be a coal mine needed.
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