20 random bookmarks
Bookmarks and whatnot. Закладки и всякое.
Bookmarks and whatnot. Закладки и всякое.
How I ended up using a dumbphone as my main and only phone.
A monospaced programming font inspired by the Minecraft typeface - IdreesInc/Monocraft
TIGR - the TIny GRaphics library for Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS and Android. - erkkah/tigr
A little-understood fact.
Space Explorer
A *web site* search engine, instead of a web page centered one!
package main templ Hello(name string){ <div>Hello, { name }</div> } templ Greeting(person Person){ <div class="greeting"> @Hello(person.Name) </div> }
this repo contains third party docker compose files for mycorrhiza and betula
Краткое сравнение операционных систем для мобильных устройств. Основные различия, особенности.
Прикольно такое читать. Статья старая, если что. Говорят про Пальм и Симбиан, а айфон там новинка.
hk allows temporary X11 hotkeys to be set
Tedu wrote a terminal and an article about it. Also links two other articles of his on the topic, which I also betulized. Writing your own terminal sounds fun!
UPD: there was a third other article released later, which I didn't particularly like.
Правда ли это? Не шляпа ли?
Мне в скорости потребуется написать телеграм-бота. Может вот так?
A space exploration game with spaceships programmable in Tal. I follow the development but don't play. Looks cool.
Weblite attempts to provide simplified specifications for HTML, CSS, XML for the simpler web. In idea, if you stick to these specs, your site will work like in every browser, including the small ones.
The oEmbed spec
Кому хочется впихнуть как можно больше, могут взглянуть на "Hello, world" в ELF всего 114 байт (это я знаю достаточно давно). А вот сегодня встретил компиляторы с Forth, Lisp и C всего 512 байт!
https://github.com/cesarblum/sectorforth
https://github.com/jart/sectorlisp
https://github.com/xorvoid/sectorc
I both pity and admire beginner web coders of today. Unlike me, they've not been able to accumulate gradual knowledge of HTTP, HTML, REST, JavaScript, the DOM, CSS, AJAX, JSON, asynchronous execution and event driven object oriented programming over a period of decades. They haven't walked the long path from CGI scripts to modern server side tomfoolery via PHP, ASP and various MVC frameworks. They're just brutally thrust into a complex world of Gulp, Grunt, TypeScript, React Hooks and MobX-State-Tree and it's assumed they somehow already know about all that other stuff. Computer Science has moved into the frontend in earnest and yet it still seems as if many view "web development" as "making homepages", and that it's something you can learn over a period of weeks, not years.
In retrospect, web development has always been a bit of a struggle against the powers that be.
Some things that were pretty bad for quite a long time have gotten better. But, on the whole, I dare say it's much worse now than when I started. Much like how Commodore 64 programmers could keep a map of the entire computer in their head, a moderately competent developer could churn out an acceptable web site in a matter of weeks, understand every single aspect of it and get paid in the process. If I, a quarter century ago, had possessed the experience and knowledge I do now, the simplicity of those early web pages would've felt surreal. And yet, we apparently provided a service that was of some value to some people. A digital commodity, nothing more, nothing less. Actually useful software.
The Sore Feet Song, that was used in a Mushishi opening, was, in fact, not originally written for Mushishi! The author of the song elaborates on that a little.