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Laeserin
dd664d5e4016433a8cd69f005ae1480804351789b59de5af06276de65633d319
🎵Die Gedanken sind frei. Join our relay: https://theforest.nostr1.com/ https://habla.news/laeserin

https://git.mleku.dev/mleku/smesh/src/branch/master/DDD_ANALYSIS.md

nostr:npub1syjmjy0dp62dhccq3g97fr87tngvpvzey08llyt6ul58m2zqpzps9wf6wl i am forking jumble because i have lots of time at the moment and first thing i wanted to do before changing anything, was get a domain driven design analysis done. i will leave this in the repo where you see it now, you might be interested to read it or at least skim it.

nostr:npub1m4ny6hjqzepn4rxknuq94c2gpqzr29ufkkw7ttcxyak7v43n6vvsajc2jl also, i know you know some stuff about various dev/design/architecture modalities, this is how things are done with DDD

just from first few screenfuls i can see a lot of things that i've noticed with other front end projects, especially the anemic domain model. in my own code i have for quite some years tended towards making a mess at first, and then after i find myself with several 400+ line functions, i go hard on refactoring, moving types that seem to live together into their own packages, and so on, and for which reason you can see here:

https://git.mleku.dev/mleku/next.orly.dev/src/branch/main/DDD_ANALYSIS.md

which was the state of orly until a few days ago (shortly after that was committed) that it evaluated my work pretty good, first it was 7, then after cleaning up the complexity of the 600+ line event handling code, i got upgraded to 7.5, still lots more to do.

i also applied it to the plebian-signer (forked from nostr:npub1qdjn8j4gwgmkj3k5un775nq6q3q7mguv5tvajstmkdsqdja2havq03fqm7 's gooti - i think he wrote that?) and here is the analysis of the codebase, after i added a ton of features, i wanted to get it cleaned up:

https://git.mleku.dev/mleku/plebeian-signer/src/branch/main/DDD_ANALYSIS.md

the signer, in particular, became noticably more performant after applying all of the recommendations in that document, and when i fully complete orly, i think it will also improve, though i have also added a new skill to https://next.orly.dev which is about go memory management and scheduling (just look in the .claude/skills directory). for go, there is some specific architecture to memory management, and what types go on the stack, what goes on the heap, and how to reduce allocations on the heap, and move stuff, especially stuff that the DDD analysis should be immutable, onto the stack, where it is very cheap pass by value (ie, copy) and thus enforce effective mutability with minimal cost.

I haven't been able to keep up with the Orly changes, as my computer is currently being repaired and I have a terrible cold. I'll get back to you, hopefully next week, after I have caught up and recovered.

Replying to Avatar Laeserin

You already know the Father. May I introduce you to His Son?

https://www.ncregister.com/news/muslim-conversion-boom

This Christmas, a reminder to all of my Jewish and Muslim readers, that the #Catholic Church's doors are open.

Come home. ✝

If you are near a larger parish, you can simply contact the secretary's office and ask if they have a program for adult entrants (called OCIA - Order of Christian Initiation of Adults).

For my German readers, here is a website where you can use your postal code to find a local contact:

https://www.katholisch-werden.de/taufe

For those in the USA, you can use this website to find the contact information of Catholic churches near you:

https://www.catholic.com/tract/catholic-answers-guide-for-getting-to-mass

The OCIA is explained well, here:

https://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/who-we-teach/christian-initiation-of-adults

You already know the Father. May I introduce you to His Son?

https://www.ncregister.com/news/muslim-conversion-boom

This Christmas, a reminder to all of my Jewish and Muslim readers, that the #Catholic Church's doors are open.

Come home. ✝

That jives with what he says, in the video, that it used to be a more-comprehensive holiday on Jan 6 and then got split into 2.

IS seems to have noticed that we all forgot about them, so they're trying to get attention, again, with an international string of attacks.

Thank you, to the police in Istanbul, for making sure their Christian citizens can safely celebrate Christmas. 🎄

Also, PR is important. It costs them something, to say Merry Christmas. That isn't nothing.

Well, then we need to make sure to continue to spread the Gospel, so that they learn about the Trinity.

https://youtu.be/VqCzEtin9Fo

We sing this song, from Joseph Ignaz Schnabel, in the choir, but the Domspatzen are better.

Yeah, I'm also down for the count, now, but still stuffy, not yet runny. I sang soprano in Latin at Mass, this morning, and kepting pausing to sneeze.

I was still sort of okay, until right after I served the duck, so Hubby parked me in front of the telly. 😂

I always run myself into the ground, before the high holidays.

They attend these celebrations, out of respect for their neighbors and for Mary, and because they think it has a positive message of peace and goodwill. That is tradition there.

Muslims are also free to wish Christians a "Merry Christmas", which is simply to say, "Enjoy the holiday!"

I used up all of my tissues crying happy tears. The same as every year, James.

Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel

Der Kleine Lord (Little Lord Fauntleroy)

GM and Merry Christmas Day

For the first time, in two years, Christians and Muslims in Bethlehem celebrated Christmas together, and Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa led the procession from Jerusalem to Bethlehem.

https://orf.at/stories/3415336/

Here's to President Donald Trump, who has managed to positively surprise me by moving the peace negotiations along.

And to the leaders of Ukraine and Russia, that they bring their soldiers home to their families, as soon as possible, in the true Spirit of Christmas. I especially speak to President Putin, as I know that he is a Christian. 🙏🏻

I also pray for a lasting and true peace in the Middle East, and for everyone there to be governed by honest leaders, of their own choosing, who have their best interests at heart, and who make good neighbors. And for Palestine to be quickly and sustainably rebuilt and restored.

🕊 Peace on Earth and Goodwill to all men.

Minarchy is the political theory that best jives with my #Catholic preference for subsidiarity. I simply feel no urge to take every argument out to it's full ad absurdum, which anarchy requires. Logic becomes an murky base for sound decision-making, when discussing human interaction, the further you drill it down. This causes anarchical arguments to become increasingly thin, the further out they are spun, requiring more and more logic and less and less wisdom.

But I am a person deeply bound by the knowledge in the Bible and Traditions, and the experience of my ancestors (including my philosophical ancestors, the ancient Greeks, and my spiritual ancestors, the Saints). They get a vote, in all that I do. And they didn't tend to anarchy. They sought their personal freedom through internal improvement, community, family, grace, and sacrifice, as I do.

GM and may you have a Merry Christmas. 🎄

As a #minarchist, it's always mildly entertaining to watch principled #anarchists act a bit exasperated, while trying to explain all of the 42 ways that we are simply wrong about everything.

The video is worth watching, if one-sided and a bit dull.

https://mises.web.ox.ac.uk/anarchist-minarchist-debate

Part of Georgia was taken by the Russians and their partisans. They then tried to take it back (and failed: it's still Russian). That was what he was referring to: that it was wrong to try to reclaim their own territory.

Russian partisans now run the rest of the country and it is losing independence. The parliament currently only has one party in it and they are banning and imprisoning the opposition.

https://www.reuters.com/world/five-minutes-autocracy-how-georgia-u-turned-its-western-path-2025-11-18/

Ukraine built up it's military _after_ being invaded, not before.

United Kingdom and the USA are actually obliged to defend Ukraine against Russian aggression, and have failed to do so.

It wasn't the government, but it was a political leader. Russia already occupies part of Georgia and his job is to convince the remainder that Russia is preparing to invade it and that they shouldn't fight back and risk ending up like Ukraine.

The country is hardly a democracy, anymore. Sad to watch.

There are Hungarian politicians who say the same: if Russia invades you, you shouldn't fight back. Defending yourself is stupid, they say, because it's okay to become Russian vassal state, instead of have your own country. At least, then the Russians don't bomb you.

They all talk like rapists.

Russia is occupying Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia, for years, now, and they have recently threatened Kazakhstan for being too independent-minded.

You're not a real narcissist until you decide that anyone who can beat you in a debate is part of some grand intelligence operation or has supernatural powers of persuasion.

Where I come from, we call that "being intelligent and well-educated", but you do you.

One of the most surreal things you can observe on Nostr is how many anarchists support someone literally raining bombs and drones down on other people's homes, so that they can march in and claim the property because the people in the house are dead or have run for their lives.

Like, I didn't realize that territorial wars of conquest were part of that whole anti-government ideologie, but okay.

They also keep telling me that Crimea held a referendum.

Yeah, _after_ the Russian military annexed the island, so that the Russians were the only poll observers. And the referendum had no option for simply remaining part of Ukraine. They left the choice of "do nothing, we like it this way" off of the ballot!

The Russians reported a record turnout of 83-89%, with a mind-boggling 97% choosing to join the Russian Federation. 🥴

In Putin's Russia, ballot mark *you*!

Reread what you wrote. You think Russia is being generous, for _allowing_ Ukraine to trade with the EU.

Russians have to support Putin. They're in a war and it's not like there's an effective opposition for them to support, instead. Russians have no Plan B, and they have learned to accept that.

Also, they like territorial conquest and he keeps telling them that the Empire will live again. So long as the Empire expands, at no direct cost to the ethnic Russians, they will like him. Everyone likes free shit.

But the free shit is about to get expensive, and then we'll see how much they like it.

Do you think so? I don't know. All of the Southern coastline is NATO (Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey) or NATO candidate (Ukraine and Georgia).

Odessa is the biggest prize, of course.

I doubt the goal is to share the Black Sea with Turkey. Turkey is also NATO. They are reducing their Russian oil imports, after the USA imposed more sanctions, and have announced that they want to diversify away from Russia on natural gas.

Russia is now also targeting them with drones, on land and at sea.