@littlepootis for starters, to have something that just works, you can have a browser that just downloads node scripts using ncurses, sandboxes it, and executes it
@BenjaminGruenbaum strange because you need to include a js/html/css engine in your game just to render buttons. Seems like potential redundant overhead
A webpage written with accessibility in mind and a terminal browser that takes advantage of these accessibility features could achieve what you're trying to do.
it's quite sad that there wouldn't be many people to benefit from this, expecially because the most used websites aren't going to spend money rewriting their stuff in this standard
The Gopher protocol is a TCP/IP application layer protocol designed for distributing, searching, and retrieving documents over the Internet. The Gopher protocol was strongly oriented towards a menu-document design and presented an alternative to the World Wide Web in its early stages, but ultimately Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) became the dominant protocol. The Gopher ecosystem is often regarded as the effective predecessor of the World Wide Web.
The protocol was invented by a team led by Mark P. McCahill at the University of Minnesota. It offers some features not natively supported by the...
btw, I actually remember how I came to the web standard thing: instead of writing something that was specific to github, I could try to make it a bit more general, so it would be easy for other devs to add sites they use often when using vim, like SO, or even just google
which would be simpler than a full-blown standard, because it would be very opinionated, and vim-focused
I do think I should start small though
anyone want to help me with it? Probably just a weekends project, not too sure where to start
Last but not least - thank you for speaking up. I realize you're arguing an unpopular argument that some people in meta disagree with. I want to reiterate that if you'd prefer giving criticism in a different way (email, the github repo or another alternative) we're genuinely interested in whatever feedback (as negative as it might be) you have to provide. Feel free to reach out via email (benjamingr at google's email service) too if that's better. — Benjamin Gruenbaum10 secs ago
I mean, I have some clues where to start. A lot of principles for fullstack JS dev seem to apply here too
fake your state when building the UI, then build an API, and then hook the UI to the API
I can do the API part, that's JS :P
hooking to provide state to vim? That should be as simple as filling some vim dictionaries/arrays/variables with the outputs of some commands, obviously wrapped nicely in vim functions
I don't know, I guess I'm a little post traumatic due to random people on twitter abusing members in Node.js and I don't want to encourage a situation like that here. In Node people actually had to take time off due to mental stress and it had a severe impact on their mental health at times.
Personal recap: I wouldn't actually change the room name & I wouldn't gallery it, but simply progress as we did before with keeping in mind that we have a freeze at hand when we want to discharge the situation when it gets touchy.
@Loktar @ShrekOverflow I'm considering moving to a mechanical keyboard (having never really used one before) - the Cherry MX Speed Silver looks tempting. Anything I should be wary of? (I've found regular keyboards to be too stiff, so linear sounds good to me as opposed to risking it with a tactile one that feels too heavy. Context: repetitive strain injury)
I really love this phone (OnePlus5). Driving for 3h, screen on, navigation running, music running and I'm at 39% battery. Another 29h runtime on regular usage
@BenjaminGruenbaum That sounds a lot more open than the feeling I got from reading the GH topic. Did you have a change of mind or am I misreading something?
@BenjaminGruenbaum I want to redo SICP) using TypeScript. Previously I used Python, but I would like to explicitly type every declaration. Would you suggest a better language than TypeScript? for such course..