my current text editor is trying to become cursor, and so i guess my only remaining options now are neovim and helix. anyways i'm poking around at helix since i've always wondered if it was any good.
my current text editor is trying to become cursor, and so i guess my only remaining options now are neovim and helix. anyways i'm poking around at helix since i've always wondered if it was any good.
What theme on the site is your favorite? Mine is the reddish-pinkish theme.
i'm playing umineko for the first time today. when does this happen

source: https://cohost.org/dante/post/4590040-knoll-of-the-golden (dante's current site)
Unfortunately, I forgot my bag at the start of the ride, so I didn’t get to take any pictures during it, but here’s some photos from afterwards. They were grilling burgers and they tasted great.

The ride was about 5 miles and went around the neighborhood, including some brief off-road sections1. There was a second, longer, ride afterwards that I was thinking of doing, but I came mostly for the free tune-up they were offering, which I never ended up getting. The guy doing the tune-ups took a brief look at it before the ride started and said he’d finish it afterwards, but I asked about it after the ride, he said he’d have to put in a work order since they were only doing them for free before the first ride.

It wasn’t really a huge deal, but my bike is a $25 craigslist bike, so I can’t justify a paid tune-up that will undoubtedly cost significantly more than I paid for the bike. Really unfortunate.
We crossed illegally from a path that went alongside a railroad to a greenway, which didn’t have a road. Apparently the nearby university will send campus police down like once a weekend to write tickets just because they have to or something. ↩
More links! These link roundups are something I really enjoy because I have a good collection of new articles I have stolen from other link roundups, and old articles I have stolen from other link roundups. Okay, only some of these links are stolen from other link roundups, some of them I've found myself. Anyways, I hope you enjoy them all! Please comment if you do because I really genuinely love reading these comments. It gives me real joy to know my comment system hasn't broken yet.
Heydon’s doing this series where they write an article on every single html element, in alphabetical order. This one’s on the <body> element, the one element that anyone who’s ever touched html knows about. This isn’t the most educational resource, but it is heaps of fun, and I think that’s something you can easily forget about when you’re diving into web development. It’s fun!
A short horror story set on early 2010s tumblr. It’s genuinely really good.
The writer of the scene, Bill Oakley, claims it is very unusual and doesn’t resemble any known comedy. He’s wrong; it’s a type of joke that’s old as dirt, going back at least to the Commedia dell’Arte if not to ancient Greek theatre.
This fits into my favorite genre of post on the internet: Someone with a deep knowledge in their field making a good version of something they saw someone else do badly.
I’ve been using and ignoring read-later apps since the launch of Instapaper in 2008, because precocious little dorks who cry when they realize that they will never read all the books in the world grow up to be weary adults who transfer that Sisyphean energy to hoarding thought-provoking New Yorker longreads they will also never have time to read.
It’s me. I am a precocious little dork who transferred that energy into hoarding thought provoking longreads. What hits especially hard for me is seeing the birth, rise, and fall of Omnivore from the outside. I wasn’t ever a user of Omnivore (it looked far too much like open source design crossed with a mobile port of a web app, in the worst way possible), but I respected the drive. Something that always came up when I saw people talking about it was, “How are they going to make money?” I guess the answer was that they weren’t.
But despite that, the real meat of the article comes later on. This is the hard-hitting line and the clippable sentence that I probably saw on some other website 6 months ago, which led to me reading the article, saving it somewhere so I would remember to put it in a Link Roundup, and then sharing it with you all today.
But you know what, I shouldn’t have to understand the business models of every little icon on my stupid pocket supercomputer to get through life!
Speaking of ways our modern condition is dumb, but going in a more endearing direction...
This story is silly and I love it. I love that approximately 2/3rds of the article is getting stamps. I love how anticlimactic the ending of the article is. It’s positively delightful.
oh huh, apparently there's a little blog posting month challenge for may. i think that's something i could reasonably achieve, given low enough standards, so i'll go for it. why not? my little theme for this month is "i have a lot of post ideas but no finished posts so i should write some of those". seems solid enough