Programs computers, sometimes old ones.
https://connor.zip
Connor Taffe
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Fuck you people. Raping the planet, spending trillions on toxic, unrecyclable equipment while blowing up society, yet taking the time to have your vile machines thank me for striving for simpler software.
Just fuck you. Fuck you all.
I can't remember the last time I was this angry.
I'm trying out vibe coding today for a thing on a whim.
I think I like this in the same way I enjoy watching people try to parallel park a dozen times in a row, fucking it up the same way over and over again.
Last year I ended summer with a very expired roll of Konica. It was excessively grainy and dusty, but full of vibes. And like a fool I always pointlessly try to relive old experiences, so here's the 2025 edition of "last day of summer with Agfa 1035 and Konica film". #believeinfilm #filmphotography
Another re-made poster.
from 2002, the TiBook 'Sends other UNIX boxes to /dev/null'
Print files of all the remade this and other posters, flyers and stickers at www.danamania.com/print/
I was curious how much overlap there was, and gathered some empirical evidence. Across four interests: vintage computing, programming, plan 9, and operating systems, 50-75% of URLs are not unique.
gist.github.com/cptaffe/3731...
@netnewswire.com should reader mode follow the <link> tag? Lobste.rs doesn’t work right with reader mode because NNW follows the <guid> link. HN instead provides a <comments> tag and no <guid>.
@emschwartz.me this may just be a limitation of semantic search, but I've noticed that the interest-specific RSS feeds have a lot of overlap. For instance, "Not So Prompt: Prompt Optimization as Model Selection" shows up under the every interest, from "vintage computing" to "graphics programming."