I am not the author of the article.
I am not the author of the article.
It’s a well assembled article, but mostly based on a few comments in a hackernews post from yesterday. I would like to know how widespread it was.
This sometimes happens when youtube changes something, usually fixed after some days.
My career has followed some of that journey, and I also have come back to using Alpine, HTMX, and a server side rendering for SPA-like apps. Some pages are just almost all HTML, and just use HTMX to switch the client content without a page load.
This would be a good addition to HTMl. I think HTMX has more than proven this way to update a page without a page load.
I assume it’s not human driven. Maybe some automated archiver? Some bot looking for proof of pirated content, and just downloads everything it finds?
I don’t think anyone is blaming just inflation for how people are feeling, but those high prices are still there, and so are a huge list of other things to worry about.
I have seen almost all the Star Trek content, and never developed a love of the ship structure. I like the Defiant because it doesn’t look like it will snap in pieces when it turns a corner. It also proves you don’t need to put the propulsion on sticks.
In a lot of ways we are closer to 80’s cyberpunk, just with less neon and cool clothes. So maybe neon covered, flying street cars?
They got Spore right.
I have been going between this and Obsidian for a bit now. I do like outliners, but at some point I decided that a collection of markdown files is more future proof, and Obsidian is more suitable to that structure.
There is even a Star Trek-ish game where you have to produce to earn money to upgrade the ship for your crew. I get that it is a game mechanic, but seems like a perfect setting to not have money, and just concentrate on the people.