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this is cool! funnily enough I just did something very similar last weekend: https://github.com/codetheweb/bay-wheels-py


I love the Wandering Inn but calling it “a bit longish” is quite an understatement.


Ok it's a bit longer, only a little bit.

See for yourself https://www.reddit.com/r/WanderingInn/comments/wil9pi/word_c...


OT, but I'm legitimately surprised that WoT is longer than the saga of recluse.

I'm also a very mildly annoyed that they included several era-spanning series on the list, but limited Dragonlance to the chronicles trillogy, despite that including followups by the original authors (Legends, Second generations).


I think FreshBuzzer is a similar idea: https://freshbuzzer.com/


You're right, this looks like almost exactly the product I would have made if I decided to turn it into a product. I think they started around the same time I did. I wonder how much money they're making on it? Could be a nice little lifestyle business if they get enough users. I bet their Airbnb-focused features would be the real moneymaker, I didn't consider that as a potential market.


https://www.indiehackers.com/product/buzzmein

for people that don't want to click... $450/month and also buzzmein was the old name


Wow cool, thanks for finding that! Interesting to see how my idea of revenue potential matched with reality. I guess it matched pretty well, however I see he hasn't done any advertising and I feel like revenue could grow 10x or more if more people knew about it. At that point it seems like it would be a worthwhile project. Tricky to market though as it's one of those things that people don't know they want until it's explained to them.


yeah certainly possible to get the word out and likely get the numbers up. to hit that target with their prices you'd need about 1500 people using it every month. definitely not unreasonable but not easy since it's in a tiny niche that people don't really think about.


The main thing is Delta, an excellent game emulator: https://github.com/rileytestut/Delta


Actually, it's why AltStore was written.


Is console emulation on a smartphone a good user experience? I’d love to hear more from someone who does that.

I’m worried about battery drain, lack of hardware keys (or the need to carry a gamepad) as well as being interrupted by notifications.

I’m likely spoiled by nintendo switch; and there are also dedicated console emulation devices, they seem interesting too.


I've used Delta both with a gamepad (Backbone) and just with the touch screen to play a few Gameboy Advance games. I have an iPhone 12 Pro Max. The experience was super nice both ways.

The touch screen interface is essentially the shape of the gameboy or whatever Nintendo console you're emulating and is responsive and works the way you expect it to. The Backbone connects automatically and just works. If you want, you can remap the buttons.

The annoying thing about having to use Delta and Altstore is the need to keep AltServer running on my desktop or laptop. Frequently, my phone would be unable to find the running instance the only way to refresh the app (required every 7 days) would be to connect with a wire to my desktop or laptop. When it worked, it was great. But when it didn't, I was annoyed.

That said, it does have cloud sync with various services and it does work well.


While travelling, being able to have a rather large library of classic games to play, while using the device that I'm already carrying is a huge benefit. While I wish emulation on iOS was a little easier, using Delta/AltStore is not difficult or anything.

I've carried a Backbone with me and played a ton of GBA games with touchscreen controls and the backbone, and it's pretty great, depending on the game. Carrying the backbone is a lot smaller than a Nintendo Switch or one of the many larger screened android emulation devices that are now available.

This is all up to personal preference obviously, but having one less device to carry is a big plus for me. Game emulation is the one thing that makes me question whether or not it's time to ditch iOS and just get an Android for my daily driver...


I recently replayed most of Pokemon Fire Red in RetroArch on my android phone (installed via f-droid). It worked surprisingly well! I only stopped because I bought a dedicated device to do so (Anbernic RG35XX, which is also fantastic). So in a pinch, console emulation on a smartphone, especially for older consoles like Gameboy Advance, works very well.

To get around the on-screen buttons, I ended up connecting my ps5 controller via Bluetooth which worked amazingly straight out of the box with zero configuration.


Anything portable has always emulated well (or at least have since 2012).

Virtual buttons exist for the gamepads of older devices (NES-derived layouts generally look pretty good, so NES/SNES/GB/GBC/GBA emulates well).

The 3D home consoles tend to be a bit more dependent on the game (early 3D games have some pretty shitty button mappings in general and that's only amplified when emulating with virtual buttons).

As for emulation quality; handhelds emulate really well. Consoles made after 2000 are a bit of a toss-up at times, but generally also work decent.

As for battery drain; not an issue with handheld/old system emulation. Can't speak to home console emulation sorry.


I can play Wind Waker on my Pixel 4a, a mid level phone from a couple years ago. I imagine if apple could be arsed to open their stupid ban on jits you could emulate switch titles without a hitch on iPhones.

You probably still want a game pad for any 3d titles tho, on Gameboy on screen inputs are fine but the lack of precision can be really annoying to get over. Fortunately the xbox controllers work out of the box with dolphin.


AltStore has an option to (temporarily) enable JITs on a per app basis.

JIT is not disabled on the hardware level, safari does use it for JS for example. Just ordinary AppStore apps can’t do so.

Also, in my experience with Delta playing some of the Pokemon games, I noticed no difference between the non-JIT and JIT-ted versions.


I see, the last time I looked into this was shortly after apple closed the last known jailbreak options and before they allowed jits in some circumstances.

The lack of a speed difference I assume is down to the fact that delta supports some pretty weak consoles which you could emulate in a browser. Dolphin's jit vs interpreter vs cached interpreter in for example Wind Waker is a 10-40x speed improvement on my phone.


a lot of gamepads plug in to the lightning or USB c port like the razer kishi.

iphones especially have good SoCs for emulation, but modern android is really good as well barring high level GPU driver bugs occasionally


I never got the appeal. I installed RetroArch on my iPad instead.


I stumbled across this [0] yesterday, which is basically exactly what you’re describing.

[0] http://playlistmachinery.com/index.html


That looks really cool, thanks for the tip!


Reminds me of What If? from Randall Monroe.

https://what-if.xkcd.com


It's shame that after that entire explanation (the moon-earth firepole one) that he never actually answers the question of how long it would take...


Most of the time goes into climbing, which he estimates as taking "several years".


You can't climb the pole. Tsiolkovsky's rocket equation rules, you can't bring enough food to climb the pole. (Yes, I know, it's not a rocket. It really should be called Tsiolkovsky's logistics equation--it applies to any situation where you have to bring along your power source, whether it's a rocket or not.)


Really? I must be misunderstanding something then.

The Earth-Moon L1 point is ~63 km from the Moon. Let's say me and my gear weigh 200 lbs, and the Moon's gravity acceleration is 1.62 m/s^2. 63 km * 200 lbs * 1.62 m/s^2 gives a potential energy of only 2,213 kcal. The human body is only 18-26% efficient [0] at converting food into energy, so we're probably looking at around 10-13,000 calories. Depending on what you're eating, that's 4-10 lbs of food.

Obviously, I'm ignoring the time it would take to climb that far, but in terms of energy, it seems reasonable that a human could carry enough good with them, unless I'm gravely misunderstanding something.

I'm guess that assuming "potential energy" means "the energy needed to move X pounds to Y height at Z gravity" is incorrect.

[0] https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/46788/how-effici...


I believe your L1 distance is off by about three orders of magnitude.


Oh crap you're right, not sure how I got such a low number.


The rocket equation is not necessarily relevant here, because you can have the pole be a space elevator that brings you food.


This book is pure entertainment. I bought the ebook by impulse not knowing exactly what it was about. Reading it was a surprising joy.


I did Art of Problem Solving in high school which has excellent textbooks. Certainly not for everyone though.


There are many many wonderful math books, and many many wonderful math resources on youtube. (As well as, of course, many many terrible ones!) I second AOPS! They have a fantastic series for younger kids called "Beast Academy" (https://beastacademy.com), and their challenge problem sets are fantastic! The same blog has a couple of other posts about them: https://leosstemhacks.wordpress.com/2019/11/06/the-three-bes...


There's also Life of Fred which is definitely different to anything else out there.


Really happy to see blur placeholders and automatic dimension detection of local sources being added to the Image component.


I took the plunge a few months ago on the Moonlander hoping to alleviate wrist pain and have not regretted it one bit.


I wonder what are the thumb keys mapped to? Or what did you choose to map them to?


Left is space, backspace, command, and a macro for Raycast. Right is escape, enter, tab, and layer switch key for media controls.


The base layer of my left thumb cluster has Space, Ctrl, Alt and a key for switching layers. My right thumb cluster's base layer has Enter, Tab, Backspace and Esc.


Can confirm, it’s been a mess so far. Quite unfortunate considering that Simple was genuinely a good banking app/service.


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