fyi: chatGPT is great at coming up with the proper regex search for notepad++. That is by far the most value I have gotten out that directly that I am aware of.
My first ever programming mentor was a big emacs guy. A lot of our work involved several computers so we'd ssh around a lot and I was always jealous of him never losing his editing experience.
A lot of our work involved several computers so we'd ssh around a lot and I was always jealous of him never losing his editing experience.
I wind up doing a bunch of editing in a browser, but I hadn't considered trying to do all that into Emacs. I should spend some time with this interactive REST client, since the system I'm working with also has a REST API.
a bicycle can't act as your entire userland.
This. I want to be this crazy.
Well shoot, half of my projects are at least that crazy. I guess I'm already half-way there.
Anything and everything, but most are ideas at the moment. Here's a cross-section:
I've started working on a Nostr library (very rough and non-functional at the moment). I plan to use this to make at least two things: a command-and-control library, and a browser/publisher to browse/post hypertext documents on Nostr relays (it's complicated).
I made a half-joke, half-serious password manager in Common Lisp. It's only somewhat useful, since many websites still have insane password requirements.
For my music project, I need some specialized music software, and I think Gsharp is the best candidate for that. I've looked at the source code for several music composition programs, and Gsharp appears to be at a sweet spot in terms of features and ease of modification. Unfortunately, it doesn't work with recent versions of CLIM, so I'd have to learn CLIM to fix it.
I've done some very preliminary work to put ECL inside of Quake 1 in order to make Quake moddable at runtime. I will probably abandon this project, because Quake is rather limited (e.g. it really doesn't want you to change the map after it's been loaded). So I've been thinking about a new engine that would use skiplists and an advanced 3d raycasting renderer.
I've been thinking about a compiler that would accept Common Lisp and output an FPGA bitstream. The compiler would be a constraint solver, because it would allocate resources inside an FPGA for performance and security. Once that works, I would feed it into itself so that it could run bare-metal on an FPGA, and be used to program other FPGAs on the same board -- essentially a computer made of just a bunch of FPGAs. Imagine a web browser running bare-metal inside one FPGA and the entire network stack running bare-metal in another FPGA connected to an RJ45 port. This is not a simple project, but it would make an entirely new class of computers possible.
I've got a bunch of notes on a portable security system for Common Lisp. It would provide a genuine capabilities system, using a specialized REPL that replaces symbols according to a rule set. The goal is to incorporate this system into a Lisp OS (e.g. Mezzano) to make it a secure multi-user OS. But this could also be used to run untrusted code in a secure way.
I have very little time to work on my projects, so most are stuck in the design phase. I need to start using PTO to focus on my projects, since (a) my current job is somewhat of a dead-end, and (b) a few of my projects could actually be useful to others.
I have considered paying someone else to work on my projects for me, but my income is not high enough to pay even for part-time work. Maybe I should pitch one of my project ideas to YCombinator and use VC money to pay for a programmer to work on my ideas. But, that would involve a lot of paperwork, which I really hate.
Yes, I like the unified interface for features like search, copy & paste, and the ability to copy the URL and open multiple tabs.
I like that SN works so well on mobile web and I don't have to install yet another app that takes at least 200 MB of storage, needs to be updated 3 times a week or it will stop working, and I have to copy the link and open the same thread in a browser to do a simple ctrl+F text search, as is the case e.g. with Reddit.
for notes, I use emacs (doom-emacs configuration), for deft + org-mode almost exclusively. I'd love to use emacs exclusively, but haven't learned to be that hardcore yet.
vscode for dayjob where I'm newish to ruby, typescript before
Gnucash for business operations
calibre for books, but I don't use a lot of ebooks these days :(
I tend to prefer native email clients, they allow me to have a local copy of my messages and it is much easier (and safer) to handle encrypted content. Nowadays I use Thunderbird, it just works, but I'm open to better alternatives, if they exist.
I wonder that too. The token attached to the browser doesn't sit right with me. I wonder why so many people use it here? Maybe because it is Chrome but not Chrome (Google version). I use a privacy tweaked Firefox. Is LibreWolf even better than that? I also use Orion browser from Kagi on my Mac.
Recently I found open source youtube private client, that makes u watch utube privately. Import manually your subscriptions and no Google needed. Freetubeapp.io