I like to use a variation of this in vim to quickly see if an html doc I'm working on contains weird characters that I might want to replace with &html; entities: /[^ -~]
The example given illustrates one of the flaws of almost all todo implementations: "Study for math exam" - you can never check this off the list because it can't be discretely finished.
Let's see if HN allows this long link directly to the generated bookmarklet: http://benalman.com/code/test/jquery-run-code-bookmarklet/?n...
I found this great little jQuery bookmarklet generator from Ben Alman: http://benalman.com/code/test/jquery-run-code-bookmarklet/ You can just paste this code in and generate yourself a bookmarklet to reveal the quora…
Even the 'I' looks wrong. Well done.
It's easy to call it a meaningless interaction, but it's far from meaningless. He's explicitly breaking an implicit trust between himself and the reader. He's saying "Hey reader, I'm watching you." If you don't think…
This, while cool, just seems like the wrong way to go about things. I like this solution or something like it: https://github.com/mindbrix/UIImage-PDF
I like to use a variation of this in vim to quickly see if an html doc I'm working on contains weird characters that I might want to replace with &html; entities: /[^ -~]
The example given illustrates one of the flaws of almost all todo implementations: "Study for math exam" - you can never check this off the list because it can't be discretely finished.
Let's see if HN allows this long link directly to the generated bookmarklet: http://benalman.com/code/test/jquery-run-code-bookmarklet/?n...
I found this great little jQuery bookmarklet generator from Ben Alman: http://benalman.com/code/test/jquery-run-code-bookmarklet/ You can just paste this code in and generate yourself a bookmarklet to reveal the quora…
Even the 'I' looks wrong. Well done.
It's easy to call it a meaningless interaction, but it's far from meaningless. He's explicitly breaking an implicit trust between himself and the reader. He's saying "Hey reader, I'm watching you." If you don't think…
This, while cool, just seems like the wrong way to go about things. I like this solution or something like it: https://github.com/mindbrix/UIImage-PDF