Finished reading Watership Down. One of the best novel I've read, hard to put down, even when it's gotten so late you can't keep your eyes open. I'm sad just thinking that it's over.
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@neauoire this toot (is that what we call mastodon tweets still?) is inspiring a purchase! ive been looking for a world to get lost in @neauoire here for you some watership down ispired post-hardcore(?) if you don't already know them https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04dIyXvYnVM FALL OF EFRAFA "Owsla" (full album) I see a bunch of the Japanese-speaking MSX scene noodling around with #uxn these days, and some of them are complaining that the Google Translation of the documentation is utterly undecypherable. That's a problem.
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For your consideration, a #mos6502 disassembler in #lisp "cl-6502 is a Common Lisp emulator, assembler and disassembler for the MOS 6502 processor" https://github.com/kingcons/cl-6502#readme (Because if it's in Lisp it might be short and sweet.) We stumbled on a little lean-to, deep in the woods, where someone lived for some time, this person's books, kettle, bucket and tarps are all still there. I wonder if they've stayed over the winter, and how beautiful and scary this place must have looked covered in snow. I haven't seen a car, let alone a road in weeks.. There's hardly any planes that fly these parts, I think two or three days ago I heard a plane fly over us at night. @neauoire The dream, truly... That sounds even more rugged than lots of Alaska - AK has a bonkers number of planes. Less so in Southeast (folks use boats there, albeit almost exclusively motorboats), but still more private/personal small planes than I've seen anywhere else. I've been thinking about what a glyph alphabet might look like to represent the #uxn opcodes. The computer built to last 50 years One of the most delightful RSS feed I subscribe to is from the creator of Baba Is You, from time to time, they release these little paper puzzle game designs, they are wonderful. https://www.hempuli.com/blogblog/archives/category/games/paper-puzzles The Ma’dan people in Iraq weave buildings and floating islands from reeds. Keeping warm by going through Elena Chernyshova's photos of the arctic city of Norilsk, which is in darkness for 45 days a year.
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@neauoire haha I love it! I guess you just deal with it if the wind is going the wrong way? Came across this when looking through some stuff I'd boosted with an old account. Is there documentation on how these things were used? The photos are really interesting! "Appeals to decentralization too often fail to contend with the power structures that can take hold of supposedly liberatory projects." |
@neauoire
It sounds to us like 'Forth' is the new '#Flash' 😊
Seriously, though. Forgetting the flowControl, and interactive qualities that Flash had/has, we would love to see a video-format that can handle slides and pointers more gracefully. And video-in-picture, etc.
@neauoire this is incredible.