Folklore.org: The Grand Unified Model (2) - The Finder http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=The_Grand_Unified_Model_The_Finder.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Software+Design
Folklore.org: The Grand Unified Model (1) - Resources http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=The_Grand_Unified_Model.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Software+Design
Folklore.org: Busy Being Born http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=Busy_Being_Born.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Lisa
Folklore.org: MacPaint Evolution http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=MacPaint_Evolution.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Lisa
Folklore.org: Do It http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=Do_It.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Lisa
Folklore.org: Rosing’s Rascals http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=Rosings_Rascals.txt&sortOrder=Sort+by+Date&topic=Lisa
Parsing Dates from a String and Formatting ⌘ Read more…
Recipe for periodic royalty boosts if you’re a hack: 1) create a song about a particular time of year – preferably a particular date that is not a holiday; 2) create a song about a very specific combination of very common feelings
@nblade@nblade.sdf.org: Check my tw.txt file. The specification does not allow a comment. I’ve added this now: 1970-01-01T01:00:00.000000Z▸FF:https://codevoid.de/tw.following.txt. I’d use the special date/time + FF: comment as trigger. This is backwards compatible and shouldn’t really come up in anyones’ timeline.
Tempest 4000 comes to consoles next month - Polygon https://www.polygon.com/2018/6/28/17513074/tempest-4000-launch-date-ps4-xbox-one
life hex: sick of dating sites? Instead of trusting a pickup artist, trust Furfur, Earl of Hell. Just remember to put him inside a magic triangle before asking him for relationship advice
Bad idea of the day: A browser extension that links everything in your browser cache with a fake file whose name is a hash of that item, serves those fake files over bittorrent, and, for all URLs whose expiration date is in the future, keeps a distributed table of URL to hash & attempts to fetch from bittorrent before from http
Bad idea of the day: philosophy speed-dating: get a prime number of doctoral candidates, split into two lines, and have them give hot takes to each other for 5 minutes on a stated topic before moving on.
Bad idea of the day: a browser extension that gives you long-now-dates by prefixing a zero to all four digit numbers
date - Why does man print “gimme gimme gimme” at 00:30? ⌘ https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/405783/why-does-man-print-gimme-gimme-gimme-at-0030
The Future of Online Dating Is Unsexy and Brutally Effective https://gizmodo.com/the-future-of-online-dating-is-unsexy-and-brutally-effe-1819781116
@phil@philmcclure.duckdns.org You mean the leap second in evil.txt? It’s expected to break clients … :) You can just skip lines that you can’t parse. Although it’s a valid date according to rfc3339. Maybe file a bug against coreutils?
Big improvement for #txtnish. It converts the timestamps to unixtime and displays relative dates!
@kas@enotty.dk POSIX date is very minimal, no %s, no -d and not –utc, but at least there’s -u
#txtnix displays relative dates when setting time_format to “relative”.
The pretty format is very similar to twtxt without the unicode glyphs and the relative date.
But HTTP::Date seems to work for most cases.
how about using ‘mbox’ format for twtxt selectively? we could only use ‘From:’, ‘To:’, ‘Date:’, ‘Subject:’ etc.