I do have to ask - why don't you want to use SSR just because it's an internal application? For the new Svelte Society website we're SSR:ing everything (even the Admin dashboard). Being able to use form actions is a god send.
With that said, unfortunately when using Kit in "SPA mode" you're not getting the full experience, but it's still the best thing out there. You could try Routify as well.
There's a great talk from last years Svelte Summit that was about Svelte(Kit) in "SPA mode".
Bruksvärdeshyra(utility value) is a tool by lawmakers to punt details away from actual laws, in practice rents become location based so central locations cost more (even if not always as much more as buying would cost).
I checked the laws a bit, the utility value is only mentioned for "disagreements" and the comments explicitly mentions raises as the source for disagreements. Thus when signing an initial contract (as i mentioned) the landlord is free to set whatever they feel like since a tenant would have to agree to get the apartment.
In practice (not by law) landlords are supposed to give a portion of their available stock to the common queue systems, those apartments seem to follow the utility value with some adjustment for location.
However a few years back I was in a separation and since living in Stockholm also a bit desperate and looked at the private landlord queues, the prices were far higher and since I would agree to that initial pricing it would supercede the utility value. Needless to say, I quickly pivoted to buying since that's cheaper in the long run.
Google is translating that as "utility value rent," and it appears to be something calculated by a committee based on the "value" from the tenant's point of view.
nostr's protocol is also fairly unstructured compared to atproto. ive researched bluesky, farcaster, and nostr, and their cultural origins have definitely impacted how they have approached their designs.
There is no predicting what approaches will win, but those 3 are the current viable options I think.
FYI I am part of the crypto crowd myself, but I am a SWE looking at these systems, not a CT gambler, lol.
Oh, so what about the origins of Bluesky by the same founder(s) as Twitter ?
That alone gave me pause, as Twitter ended up as one of the most despicable platforms we have to suffer today (and yes, those issues are inherent in its nature, and long predate Musk buying it). But I guess that they might have learned from their mistakes this time ??
Coolify is awesome! We use it for lots of things at Svelte Society. From self-hosting marketing and analytics to running our own Nextcloud instance as well as a bunch of other stuff.
I've missed the Vercel/Coolify hype train, the last "seamless" deployment platform I touched was Heroku.
What makes Coolify so useful?
It's never taken me more than 30 minutes to deploy self-hosted tools, from Nextcloud to Prosody, even without Docker. These "serverless" platforms certainly aren't any cheaper than bare metal and are at best marginally quicker to deploy, so what makes Coolify so useful to you?
Is it easier to maintain, manage dependencies, or load balance over time? What am I missing?
It's not really hard to deploy these things in isolation but Coolify makes it very easy to do it all on the same server. From Git integration with CI/CD in just a few clicks to just random services that you might need for business purposes (Email marketing, Analytics, Nextcloud).
30 minutes honestly sounds like a long time compared to the time it takes to do this with a PaaS.
Some other stuff that's nice: multiple environments (staging, production, you name it), Multiple deploy targets if you're running many servers (via Docker Swarm), support for Teams (in case you need multiple people to handle something, update environment variables, etc). There's lots.
Maybe you should give it a whirl? I don't know your exact use-cases
Solutions like Coolify help to save more than 30 minutes.
I have recorded a sample of my own herokulikeinspiredbycoolifysuccesssaas where I deploy a WordPress instance (with MySQL and ability to enable backups with 1 click) in less than 3 minutes, including introduction, explanations and afterword.
There is only one model of Deepseek (671b), all others are fine-tunes of other models