Oh, looks like a script was eating my twtx file
twtxt v0.0.11 decentralised self-hosted micro-blogging Twitter™like ⌘ https://github.com/prologic/twtxt/releases/tag/0.0.11
Dark haired bih and she look like Shego ⌘ https://bibliogram.hamster.dance/p/CDUZXZMnWLM
a microblogging creative coding platform like dwitter, but for sound. users would be encouraged to remix, the output of one persons code would become the input of the new code. only text would be stored on the server, with audio rendered client-side. to save on time, there could be caches of frozen audio for remixes. #halfbakedideas
the idea would be to build and share tiny 6.5 bit programs encoded as printable ascii characters. this could then in turn be read by a virtual computer to do things like paint a picture or compose a piece of music. #halfbakedideas
twtxt v0.10.0 (bug fix) Self-hosted, decentralised Twitter™-like micro-Blogging platform! Join us! ⌘ https://github.com/prologic/twtxt/releases/tag/0.0.10
a new fix to !weewiki will ignore all org-mode command strings by default. Now things like PROPERTY tags won’t show up in the output.
twtxt.net - a Decentralised Self-Hosted Twitter™-like. How and Why. ⌘ https://www.prologic.blog/2020/07/26/twtxtnet-a-decentralized.html
twtxt v0.0.8 – Self-Hosted, Decentralised Twitter™ like micro-Blogging. Now with subFeeds! ⌘ https://github.com/prologic/twtxt/releases/tag/0.0.8
@lucidiot@tilde.town very cool idea! may have to try something like that at some point…
twtxt v0.0.7 Your self-hosted decentralised Twitter™-like. ⌘ https://github.com/prologic/twtxt/releases/tag/0.0.7
there are also things like using #hashtags, which could be a useful tool to coordinate with weewiki somehow.
@adiabetic@www.frogorbits.com I like #ZSH (I’m using it with the #grml config).
When I read this I see a a niche, super premium hardware company that managed to acquire tens of thousands of customers by word of mouth. Not only that, their customers are all in-effect self employed or small businesses with huge average revenue per employee. They manage global supply chains, intense competition, all while taking on and managing huge legal/compliance risk. How is is that supposedly “dumb,” criminals can do this, and yet many of us are stretching our intellectual capacities to learn new technologies and maths, developing our nth stupid app, trying to achieve a fraction of the customer traction and revenue that street thugs manage to do every day. Are these people much smarter than average, or does it mean that if you sell something people actually want, literally nothing else matters about your intelligence, education, character, background, or anything at all. When I read these drug stories, it just reinforces for me that growth solves everything. You can succeed with a crew of violent, drug addicted idiots whose only reliable characteristic is short term thinking, and who spend half their time in prison if you have product market fit. What I’m beginning to think is that the “smarter,” people are in a company, the less anyone will want their product. It’s like the success of a venture is inversely proportional to the number of ostensible geniuses it employs. reply How Police Secretly Took over a Global Phone Network for Organized Crime | Hacker News
I want to like https://amp.rs/, but both its color schemes look horribad on a 256-color terminal (the most Terminal.app supports). The only terminal I have installed that supports lots of colors is…Visual Studio Code.
Linguistics Videos! (Coming Whether I like it or not!) ⌘ http://lukesmith.xyz
grug like new notrelated episode ⌘
Layin’ down Pipes like a Unix Chad ⌘
I would like to make a list of the computers I own on here, have pictures and specs of the machine. Would be a fun project to index them.
the Stainless Steel law: “the better designed the impact assessment of a social program, the more likely is the resulting estimate of net impact to be zero.” The Iron Law Of Evaluation And Other Metallic Rules · Gwern.net
I could possible check your version of fzf and start the ui wthout reload. But that seems a lot of work for an experimental subcommand where i’m stil not sure if i like it… :)
in life I do as little as I can, like they can’t MAKE you
Scrum is a way to take a below average or poor developer and turn them into an average developer.It’s also great at taking great developers and turning them into average developers. Leave scrum to rugby, I like getting stuff done | Hacker News
https://t2bot.io/docs/2020-matrix-org-lag/ Some confirmation why I prefer the good ‘ol (actually it’s improving to current demands all the time) #XMPP and don’t switch to the fancy new kids in town like, currently, #MATRIX.
People of twitter all seem to do the same thing, one of them does something they all do it, like one mind between them all.
@dgold@dgold.eu Why do you use mac of you don’t like it? 🤣
Surprise of the day: the “you sent an e-mail” sound in Outlook for iOS really benefits from a decent amount of stereo separation. Kind of a pity that its separatedness will kind of be like an easter egg.
One reason why the world is in a mess is because, for a long time, the ratio between ‘explore’ and ‘exploit’ has been badly out of whack. Entities like procurement have been allowed to claim full credit for money-grabbing cost-savings without commensurate responsibility for delayed or hidden costs. The Illusion of Certainty | Hacker News
Well, it was not a proper fix, more like a duck-tape mend, the right thing to do is to add a BSD branch and fix the calls to BSD’s awk and fmt so they produce the data in the way the rest of the code expects it. #txtnish #gnu #bsd
Well, it was not a proper fix, more like a duck-tape mend, the right thing to do is to add a BSD branch and fix the calls to BSD’s awk and fmt so they produce the data in the way the rest of the code expects it. #txtnish #gnu #bsd
I like the clean and simple design choice. Easy to read and not distracting. Good!
Why is programming fun? What delights may its practitioner expect as his reward? First is the sheer joy of making things. As the child delights in his mud pie, so the adult enjoys building things, especially things of his own design. I think this delight must be an image of God’s delight in making things, a delight shown in the distinctness and newness of each leaf and each snowflake. Second is the pleasure of making things that are useful to other people. Deep within, we want others to use our work and to find it helpful. In this respect the programming system is not essentially different from the child’s first clay pencil holder “for Daddy’s office.” Third is the fascination of fashioning complex puzzle-like objects of interlocking moving parts and watching them work in subtle cycles, playing out the consequences of principles built in from the beginning. The programmed computer has all the fascination of the pinball machine or the jukebox mechanism, carried to the ultimate. Fourth is the joy of always learning, which springs from the nonrepeating nature of the task. In one way or another the problem is ever new, and its solver learns something: sometimes practical, sometimes theoretical, and sometimes both. Finally, there is the delight of working in such a tractable medium. The programmer, like the poet, works only slightly re- moved from pure thought-stuff. He builds his castles in the air, from air, creating by exertion of the imagination. Few media of creation are so flexible, so easy to polish and rework, so readily capable of realizing grand conceptual structures. (As we shall see later, this very tractability has its own problems.) Ask HN: How to rediscover the joy of programming? | Hacker News
@lahvak@lahvak.github.io Maybe the exact answer is, like, something divided by 7.