100r.co
TermKit
Our great sponsors
100r.co | TermKit | |
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13 | 20 | |
298 | 4,435 | |
3.0% | - | |
9.6 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | over 12 years ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
100r.co
- My 3-Year Experiment as a Digital Nomad
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How to stay positive when life gets you down
Pirates living life at sea: https://100r.co
- Minimalist sailing developers website, rabbits I forgot
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Looking for a non-blog type static website builder
I personally like what 100r made https://github.com/hundredrabbits/100r.co
- Ask HN: What's the coolest website you know?
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Ask HN: Please mention dev collectives working on cool projects
The other day there was a comment in a thread making reference to https://100r.co. and I wonder if you know more dev teams creating something interesting.
I'm also interested in small for-profit teams, like Panic, as long as they work in multiple projects.
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Logic
I highly recommend exploring the parent site https://wiki.xxiivv.com and the associated http://100r.co the author is working on with their sailing boat partner. Yes, they're living on a sail boat in the Pacific Ocean.
It's such a deep rabbit hole of talent, passion and intellectual gratification. I really love their stuff.
- 13 years sailing around the world
- New Year, New CEO
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Donald Knuth – The Patron Saint of Yak Shaves
I follow the folks over at 100 rabbits (https://100r.co) and I think they’ve sort of developed yak shaving into a lifestyle.
I don’t want to go too far into it cause the website is a treasure trove and exciting to explore on your own but if you follow some of their latest stuff, they’ve built a stack based virtual machine, and a whole set of software around it and it truly feels like they are just exploring every avenue that interests them without rushing themselves. Truly the embodiment of my grow a beard and learn Haskell dreams.
TermKit
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Waveterm
First time I saw an idea like this was with termkit [1], which I thought was great and was sad to see it didn't get continued development.
I really feel like we overlook the ways in which we limit ourselves by having our CLI interfaces be tied to a thing that emulates a terminal from the 80s.
The composability, scriptability, history, etc. of CLIs is great, but why should that preclude us from being able to quickly show a PNG or graph a function?
Maybe it's an idea whose time has come.
[1] https://github.com/unconed/TermKit
- Stable Fiddusion: Frequency-domain blue noise generator
- The Small Website Discoverability Crisis
- Hackery, Math and Design by Steven Mittens
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Fuck It, We'll Do It Live
I'm impressed by this blog every time I see it, both visually and content-wise.
- Calculating dot products on GPU instead of CPU
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Ask HN: Has anyone fully attempted Bret Victor's vision?
I agree with this. It's hard to nail down why Victor's talks are so compelling, when each of these items separately are much more mundane but are still quite well explored areas.
* "What if" feedback loops/direct manipulation
Victor's vision abstractly seems to be trying to predict/explore the consequence of some action in programming, and in specific demonstration seems to be using small widgets to allow easy manipulation of inputs to get an intuitive understanding of outputs. This could be boiled down to different goals: "Allow a program to be more easily tweaked" and "Explore a concept to get intuition of a different viewpoint". The more cynical/pragmatic interpretations for these are "make a GUI for your program" and "use interactive demos when teaching certain topics".
The first interpretation is almost comical, but we can maybe expand this to be "when you make a GUI, think about how your interface is being interpreted intuitively and this can help make your app more usable". This can maybe understood more easily when taken with the fact that Bret Victor helped design the interface for the first iPhone - famously intuitive to use. This also leads to its limitations - only concepts that have another more intuitive viewpoint can be represented. I can add a colour wheel to my WYSIWYG editor rather than hex values, but I can't easily create a GUI that lets me express that I want to validate, strip the whitespace from an email address and put it into lowercase.
The second interpretation leads to explorable explanations, which Victor has made a few of himself [0,1], but I would also cite Nicki Case [2] and unconed [3] as being other good examples. Again, this is only afforded to specific topics that have scope for exploration.
* Making logic feel more geometric/concrete
This can be seen in things like Labview (made in 1986), Apache NiFi (made in 2006) among others, e.g. SAS. In a sense, this has existed in the form of UNIX pipelines and functional programming since the first LISP was made. There is a further point which is "there currently aren't tools like this that are suitable for a non-programming audience", which is what 'Low Code' and 'No Code' is trying to achieve, but unfortunately in practice as soon as you hit a limitation of the framework then you're back to needing an engineer again.
* Human Interfaces
Sort of addressed in 'feedback loops' point above, but the DynamicLand is an interesting demo of what he's trying to get to. I think this speaks more to me with internet of things. I have friends who have set up full smart-home heating systems and can move music between rooms which are all very much seen the same as adjusting a physical thermostat rather than 'programming' or similar.
There is definitely a lot that can be explored here for certain applications, but there probably isn't direct utility in arranging pieces of paper with coloured dots on it in order to set the path of a robot. I can see this in a more consulting/capture sense of presenting certain input parameters in a more physical format, but again this is deviating from the OP's notion that this is a whole programming environment.
[0] http://worrydream.com/LadderOfAbstraction/
[1] http://worrydream.com/KillMath/
[2] https://ncase.me
[3] https://acko.net
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B Com -> BE IT (Learning)
Just a ref: https://acko.net/
- this true?
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Use.GPU
Cool, Steven Wittens is behind this. The header at https://acko.net/ is one of the first examples of WebGL I remember seeing in the wild, and still one of the cleanest. Looking forward to seeing where this goes!
What are some alternatives?
privacyguides.org - Protect your data against global mass surveillance programs.
manim - A community-maintained Python framework for creating mathematical animations.
riju - ⚡ Extremely fast online playground for every programming language.
termy - A terminal with autocomplete
this-word-does-not-exist - This Word Does Not Exist
mathbox - Presentation-quality WebGL math graphing
govuk-puppet - Decommissioned: Puppet manifests that used to provision the legacy GOV.UK stack.
consola - 🐨 Elegant Console Logger for Node.js and Browser
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
manim - Animation engine for explanatory math videos
jekyll-theme-console - A jekyll theme inspired by linux consoles for hackers, developers and script kiddies.
playground-macos - My portfolio website simulating macOS's GUI, developed with React and UnoCSS.