sad
I remember implementing automatic hard wrap in BASIC, I was probably about 12 years old. The Helix bug may get to that age before they do it lol.
helix still mostly fine but I am really missing automatic hard wrap and had to resort to this macro to limp along "@mip:reflow<ret><esc>;"
I had been meaning to try hx anyway, and also I had been wanting to use haskell-language-server which requires some horrible mess of plugins in vim and just works in hx
really a pity about vim, it does look like they either fixed or introduced a security hole with one of the commits, so I hope that works out for them. I used vim for about 25 years, emacs briefly before that.
I do remarkably little editor configuration or fancy stuff despite using it all day, but anyway yesterday I discovered vim is getting vibe-coded commits and today I have switched to a pretty stock helix which looks like it will be fine.
making lentil soup with solar power in a little snowstorm
pondering filletting a piano
had a moment where I wondered if a friend had faked his death
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1054108#84
#unicode combining mn when? #microsoft
I have a HOW big ssd in my car? To hold that few mp3s? lol
guess it's finally time to repartition this 1 tb ssd that had a 15 gb boot partition copied over to it and was otherwise left unused..
in which i receive a working LLM-generated patch, and almost clean-room a reimplementation for copyright reasons, before realizing that Anthropic INC probably copied my own code w/o attribution
Discovered a T510 Thinkpad we didn't know we even had, and cobbled together a working power supply. Well, I guess I need to install linux on this Windows 7 beast.
Wild to me that plumbing has a boundary between the user servicible side and the pro side. Where the user servicible side is all rubber gaskets that will fail, flexible pipes that will corrode and leak, and crank it tight but not too tight fittings. And the pro side, whether PEX or copper pipe, is super solid and *easier*.
Of course this is a post about #computing as well as #plumbing
Imagine coming so close to War Games, entirely unintentionally.
(Also it's nice to read some actual human written code rather than what the LLM brainrot later reduced you to.)
Dug a bit more into the guy's work in between these two career endpoints, and found quality commits like these.
Truely amazing.
imagine being 17 years old and a year ago you were using AI to generate dumb stuff like this.. but today you had to private all your socials after your AI bot went rogue and started writing blogposts to shame a free software developer
They officially suggest hiding who is running bots. Trust me, they understand what they're doing.
#Openclaw is a DDOS attack against free software. Including the psychological wellbeing of its developers. People who put such tools in the hands of script kiddies need to be held to account.
gonna be keeping my eye on https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/merge_requests/15378
It's impressive in a way that the developer of this waded through 21 thousand words of LLM spew along the way. Their inputs kind of tell a story at least:
page-015.html:when ghc compiles a lot of modules, is there a way to make it more concurrently?
page-015.html:no i mean on a normal ghc compile on a large project with -j already enabled, are there still bottlenecks where it could do more concurrency?
page-016.html:estimate impact of each change
page-016.html:could module level sitll be improved?
page-016.html:yes
page-016.html:maybe the interface reuqires the codegen somehow?
page-016.html:yes
page-017.html:yes pls go ahead and implemnt it
page-017.html:lets go on
page-018.html:lets not wait for ghc to build, lets make all the code changes
page-018.html:go on
page-018.html:go
(excerpted)
a faucet handle pulling it open when there is no water pressure seems like a strange design flaw, or is it some kind of feature?
anyway, switched from frozen solid water tank to reserve tank that has enough mass in it to not have frozen full yet
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