Really like this, thanks for making it! It appears that rendering for code blocks (```) is still not implemented (see here https://gitclassic.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/100045). Would love to see this grow
A great example of good software with this definition is bspwm. I've been using it for 7 years now, it's as complete as a software can get.
I think the greater issue here is the possibility of the entire article being AI slop and the 'doomed' direction in which we are heading where reputed sources of information are churning out slop.
This one [1] is quite tasteful. I looked at it for a good minute. [1] https://devlids.com/lids/the-binh
I try to read blogs and hackernews on ladybird. Ofcourse it crashes sometimes but at the moment its pretty adequate for basic html+css.
>Oh, and “NEW!” animated GIFs between the three items. That's gotta be the second most popular web design quirk. Haha
marquee is used religiously by some official Indian websites [1]. It's the primary mechanism they use to deliver news or updates on the websites. [1] For example: https://www.nagpuruniversity.ac.in/
Couldn't find 12 Angry Men on it :(
I am doing the same but with LLVM. For starters, I filtered issues with the "good first issue" label and found something to work on [1]. It took 2 months in review and about a month to research and write the code.…
Going by the task at hand, registering keystrokes pressed by a human, USB 3 is also not quite needed.
Pretty cool. A drawback of such a hard filter is we also lose all the human generated content posted after Nov 2022. I am no expert in this but a ad-block like list based filter but for AI generated content may work for…
Equality saturation (something that luminal uses at its core) is a topic for hardware synthesis and verification too. Something like dynamic hardware generation (instead of kernel generation). For example, see this…
I found todo apps to be clunky and bloated. I decided to use github issues (of a private repository) as my notes. I even made a little script around it (via gh-cli) to edit it from the command line [1]. I don't update…
I like the fact that some words are there from the very beginning.
Really like this, thanks for making it! It appears that rendering for code blocks (```) is still not implemented (see here https://gitclassic.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/100045). Would love to see this grow
A great example of good software with this definition is bspwm. I've been using it for 7 years now, it's as complete as a software can get.
I think the greater issue here is the possibility of the entire article being AI slop and the 'doomed' direction in which we are heading where reputed sources of information are churning out slop.
This one [1] is quite tasteful. I looked at it for a good minute. [1] https://devlids.com/lids/the-binh
I try to read blogs and hackernews on ladybird. Ofcourse it crashes sometimes but at the moment its pretty adequate for basic html+css.
>Oh, and “NEW!” animated GIFs between the three items. That's gotta be the second most popular web design quirk. Haha
marquee is used religiously by some official Indian websites [1]. It's the primary mechanism they use to deliver news or updates on the websites. [1] For example: https://www.nagpuruniversity.ac.in/
Couldn't find 12 Angry Men on it :(
I am doing the same but with LLVM. For starters, I filtered issues with the "good first issue" label and found something to work on [1]. It took 2 months in review and about a month to research and write the code.…
Going by the task at hand, registering keystrokes pressed by a human, USB 3 is also not quite needed.
Pretty cool. A drawback of such a hard filter is we also lose all the human generated content posted after Nov 2022. I am no expert in this but a ad-block like list based filter but for AI generated content may work for…
Equality saturation (something that luminal uses at its core) is a topic for hardware synthesis and verification too. Something like dynamic hardware generation (instead of kernel generation). For example, see this…
I found todo apps to be clunky and bloated. I decided to use github issues (of a private repository) as my notes. I even made a little script around it (via gh-cli) to edit it from the command line [1]. I don't update…
I like the fact that some words are there from the very beginning.