Amazing piece of software and investigation into temporal dithering in the non-Intel macs. Thank you!
Nice job. I wonder if there's a way to get the font exactly like Windows 7? It looks a bit different.
Only missing a real Outlook competitor (EWS).
I hope the VMoo author will consider releasing it open-source.
Very unfortunate. I know many blind people who use screen readers and basic HTML is important to them.
read() would be a killer feature for adoption. There's a ton of MOOs that make use of this in-verb, for menus or other things. For example: color = player:choose("Pick a color", {"Red", "Orange", ...});
how did you come to pick Rust (just curious, vs Elixir, Java with Loom, etc)?
Nice. I still use VMOO (anyone remember VMOO)! Is that rmoo/emacs on Fedora? There's a nice collection of MOO resources: https://lisdude.com/moo/ It is too bad some of the old MOO dbs like ScrabbleMOO and NYC MOO are…
Does the phone screen PWM free?
Amazing piece of software and investigation into temporal dithering in the non-Intel macs. Thank you!
Nice job. I wonder if there's a way to get the font exactly like Windows 7? It looks a bit different.
Only missing a real Outlook competitor (EWS).
I hope the VMoo author will consider releasing it open-source.
Very unfortunate. I know many blind people who use screen readers and basic HTML is important to them.
read() would be a killer feature for adoption. There's a ton of MOOs that make use of this in-verb, for menus or other things. For example: color = player:choose("Pick a color", {"Red", "Orange", ...});
how did you come to pick Rust (just curious, vs Elixir, Java with Loom, etc)?
Nice. I still use VMOO (anyone remember VMOO)! Is that rmoo/emacs on Fedora? There's a nice collection of MOO resources: https://lisdude.com/moo/ It is too bad some of the old MOO dbs like ScrabbleMOO and NYC MOO are…
Does the phone screen PWM free?