Food
@soapdog yeah! I have a lil mould to make triangles 😁
Food
@fleeky seizing the means of (sushi) production
@indutny Success!
@freakazoid Yeah I have a feeling it'd be hard to find someone in Ottawa with one. In the past I tried getting a Tap Strap 2 to replace my keyboard, but it just couldn't supply me with all the shortcuts I needed for average computer use and shortcuts using SUPER+* were impossible to set on their web UI. 😅 Maybe if I get a major raise or something I'll re-add it to my priority list.
@freakazoid Snap yeah the twiddler 4 seems like a major improvement over the 3. Didn't know it was out! Ty for the heads up.
@freakazoid Interesting! Have you tried this out before?
@freakazoid Maybe! They're just so expensive and I'm not sure that they can output all the key bindings I need for programming. 😿
My new BT mouse came in. Gonna set it up with my Viture Neckband so I don't have to fiddle with the buttons on it when I'm walking around.
Main question is how I'll get keyboard input outside the on screen keyboard.
I kinda want to install custom firmware that would turn the middle button into a morse code device. Wish these companies published their source code!
Wrote up a gnarly sequence of hacks for downloading every video in a TikTok account, just in case anyone needs such a thing in the next ~24 hours
uv, yt-dlp, JS in the Firefox DevTools and optionally throws in mlx-whisper for generating transcripts too https://til.simonwillison.net/tiktok/download-all-videos
When I touch a website I don't really think of it in terms of boxes with text and buttons. I think of the data being pulled from the backend. This kinda opens your eyes to how much "validation" on the front end is just a flimsy layer of tissue paper. What's fun is JS-heavy apps are usually the easiest to subvert by sniffing on network traffic and pulling the raw data by duplicating requests.
@m455 LMK if you find or make something like that. I'm also into the use case.
@m455 Like reading one poster at a time with flags for read/unread? Seems pretty doable with small adjustments to reader.distributed.press
So since #Github has decided to break their website with the latest website once you disable #JavaScript, it's worthwhile revisiting gh-cli. At first it baffles me how gh-cli can be an 80MB installable for what I hoped was a thin REST client ...
... until you realise that visiting a Github repo downloads 6.5MB of JavaScript. Then to visit the issues page it's another 10.5MB. Then to read a single issue it's 7.5MB. JUST JAVASCRIPT. Nothing else. Per page.
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Yap with me and send me cool links relating to my interests. 👍