Agreed, that was silly.
The BBC's 1960's TV version of this story is on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvrGUnIFuRs
I've been using multi-web-mode for HTML, CSS and JS recently. This simply switches to a nominated mode when you're inside a block of HTML, CSS, JS, etc. https://github.com/fgallina/multi-web-mode Quite simple and…
Before the Atari and Amiga, too, there were games like Match Day on the ZX Spectrum and Commodore 64 (quite a decent, playable game) and Kevin Toms's "Football Manager" (written in BASIC and goals shown in isometric 3D)…
The parent said it was OEM parts.
To me, Twitter seems more compatible with the older internet user's view that what you do on the internet should, if you want it to be, be somewhat anonymous. Or at least feel that way.
emacs -nw (for "no window") is super simple.
I write all my work e-mail in GNU Emacs and use the Emacs VM mailer. Because it's all inside Emacs, text from other contexts -- code, shells, mailboxes, and compiler and tool output -- can be accurately and quickly…
Agreed, that was silly.
The BBC's 1960's TV version of this story is on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvrGUnIFuRs
I've been using multi-web-mode for HTML, CSS and JS recently. This simply switches to a nominated mode when you're inside a block of HTML, CSS, JS, etc. https://github.com/fgallina/multi-web-mode Quite simple and…
Before the Atari and Amiga, too, there were games like Match Day on the ZX Spectrum and Commodore 64 (quite a decent, playable game) and Kevin Toms's "Football Manager" (written in BASIC and goals shown in isometric 3D)…
The parent said it was OEM parts.
To me, Twitter seems more compatible with the older internet user's view that what you do on the internet should, if you want it to be, be somewhat anonymous. Or at least feel that way.
emacs -nw (for "no window") is super simple.
I write all my work e-mail in GNU Emacs and use the Emacs VM mailer. Because it's all inside Emacs, text from other contexts -- code, shells, mailboxes, and compiler and tool output -- can be accurately and quickly…