I love this quote. Can't seem to find the original author to give attribution where due:
Vim is immortal in the nokia brick-phone sense. It's got very few dependencies, it'll survive a drop from a ten foot pole and it's cooperative with like thirty year old technology. It's fast and ergonomic and once armageddon comes you'll shell into the flaming wreckage of a datacenter and edit configs with it. Pure embodiment of the strength and certainty of steel.
Emacs, by contrast, is immortal in the shambling fleshbeast sense. Its thousand thralls write beautiful evocations to pull domains you never could have wanted or imagined from its flesh. It grows cancerously to envelop any domain, any need you may want from it. You can tear out its heart and swap it, still-beating, for a new one. It embodies the ultimate desire to survive. It can send email
#Gitlab can be self-hosted. This gets around things like user limits, which are a current blocker. But should we? Pro, cons, alternatives? Dear Internet, please advise
I'm looking for recent books or up-to-date text on #FunctionalProgramming with PHP. #PHP is changing rapidly and all the books I see are nearly a decade old. Any good recommendations? #FP
I had a bash file that was suddenly failing. After TOO LONG debugging, I found that one of the included functions had been broken so it ended with `fi}` instead of `fi\n}` so a linebreak had been removed. As a result the cron job that depended on that script was failing. #BeautifulBash
ah, that's the stuff. Because Gnu `date` can create Julian dates but then cannot read them. #babashka #EayNumber #JulianDates #Clojure
#Mastodon now has "edit post"? Since when?
Do any #clojure folks out there know of a short language-specific course covering the basic OWASP guidelines?
I can, for the moment, rest in peace (at least, on the issue of getting my portable docked triple-monitor setup stable with #exwm). https://orys.us/ww
New article about my 2023 "tour of the #lisp languages".
#epub. A good thing: officially standardized by the W3C https://github.com/w3c/epubcheck . However, some auto-generated epub seems to be rubbish; 3 out of 4 of my epub readers failed to parse the epub, even after editing missing fields per https://www.edrlab.org/open-standards/anatomy-of-an-epub-3-file/ . I'm not sure how the 4th one managed it, but it's pretty ugly. Guess I'm sticking with #pdf on this one.
My #ClojureScript #ShadowCLJS is not hotloading, although its codebase is just a copy of another that worked beatifully, and that a copy of another that never had troubles, either. I've looked over every difference I can find and see nothing. The WATCHER is working fine; when I make a code change, I see a spinner. But updates don't actually appear. React Devtools also show that nothing is connected. But manual hitting "refresh" works, though it feels like I'm back in the stone ages...
O frabjous day!
The good news here for those outside the EU is that Apple will have to keep WebKit good enough that users choose to keep Safari even in the face of growth hacking by other browser vendors—so that means a better open-source Webkit for all platforms in all jurisdictions
https://techcrunch.com/2024/01/26/apple-dma-webkit/
(Apple has already been on this for a while--a lot of Safari #webcompat issues have been fixed, and there is a lot of nifty CSS there)
I am a big fan of extending old, good technologies rather than recreating the wheel. #Email is one of these; both #DeltaChat and @zulip #zulip do this, in very different and equally inspiring ways.
As far as I can tell, the Achilles Heel of email is that it is TOO easy, and that has given rise to its antithesis, #spam.
My #Firefox has crashed three times today, without warning -- I just look up and its gone. It's never done that to me before! The only new thing I can think of is that I've added Discord to its work load...
I just love it when my browser WORKS. When the website doesn't break my "open in new tab" or my "back" or my "history." And I love when it's a surprize. When I click something that I was sure was going to break stuff, and it worked without breaking! No more stupid JS-only on-click handling with a useless link, etc. #webdev #htmlFirst
Middle/Senior Clojure Engineer
https://agiliway.com/middle-senior-clojure-engineer/
We are looking for a Middle/Senior Clojure Engineer to join a development team for our USA client. Their product is an AWS hosted platform for the healthcare services, written in Clojure/Python language stack. The product encompasses a few...
Full Stack Clojure web app engineer