Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | eggy1's commentslogin

Took a second to figure out. I ended up going to the Itch page and reading that you had to enter a second word to hit it back. Once I figured that out it was a blast to play. I'll be showing my students this next time I see them. Maybe more complete instructions on the game page would be helpful though!


There is also byobu [0], it is a little confusing but i like it in some cases

[0] https://www.byobu.org/


Can it do tiling -- or any other kind of -- windowing, though?

I've tried it, briefly, and my impression was that it's full-screen (or full-terminal-emulator-window) only. Which means it's not the same kind of thing at all.

There are various full-screen terminal multiplexors out there, but the point is this:

* modern screens are big and can show hundreds of rows and columns

* very long lines are really hard to read

* So, I want a tool to split up that big space into multiple smaller windows. I want to be able to keep eyes on several things at once, side by side.

* With shorter, more readable lines.


I remember using this on a pocket CHIP way back in the day. It was fun if very confusing to a much younger me, glad to see its still going and others like it as well!


I'm twinkie, and I'm twonkie, and we're the sniffer brothers


Literally, it really threw me off guard, was not expecting it all. None of the replies seemed to indicate any sort of concern either :/ though I think I gave up pretty quickly.


I used to use rocketbooks back in school, and they were quite nice. This was a few years ago so I can't comment on it now, but I really enjoyed it then. You could setup various places for it to save to and there were boxes at the bottom of the page I could check and say the first box was checked it got sent to drive, the second box could be like dropbox etc I had all mine set to different google drive folders for my classes. It was able to scan everything quite well and was honestly pretty seamless to me. I feel like there were more features but I can't remember now, even if there weren't though I still liked the organizational structure of it all.


This reminds me a lot of Mark Fisher and Capitalist Realism. Obviously if the article is true then who is to say about low serotonin levels, but in any case "It goes without saying that all mental illnesses are neurologically instantiated, but this is nothing about their causation if it is true, for instance, the depression is constituted by low serotonin levels, was still needs to be explained is why particular individuals have low levels of serotonin. This requires a social and political explanation; ... This pathologization these problems - treating them as if they were caused only by chemical imbalances in the individuals neurology and/or by their family background - any question of social systemic causation is ruled out." In essence a liberal worldview is not equipped to deal with mental illness.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: