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1864 posts latest post 2026-06-04 simple view
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May 2026 | 29 posts
Check out pythops [1] and their project impala [2]. 🛜 TUI for managing wifi on Linux References: [1]: https://github.com/pythops [2]: https://github.com/pythops/impala
Slops AI-generated slop that I thought was worth sharing. justin․searls․co · justin.searls.co [1] Justin has such great feeds on his site, I love how the main feeds are so prominant just to the left of the article you are reading. slops in particular feels like a great category. Saving this chat for later, or found it particularly interesting, but don’t really want to make a post about it. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://justin.searls.co/slops/ [2]: /thoughts/
iodine [1] by yarrick [2] is a game-changer in its space. Excited to see how it evolves. Official git [3] repo for iodine dns tunnel References: [1]: https://github.com/yarrick/iodine [2]: https://github.com/yarrick [3]: /glossary/git/
[1]https://t.co/Zapz55lpQq" [1] loading=“lazy”> noah (@noahsolomon) on X this is about to be my go to on plane flights. u don't need to pay for wifi since it's just a dns request which aren't gated behind a paywall https://t.co/Zapz55lpQq X (formerly Twitter) · x.com kinda wild, you can chat with an ai bot over a dns request?? Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://x.com/noahgsolomon/status/1954035351510716670 [2]: /thoughts/
blakewatson.com turns 20 - blakewatson.com I bought this domain as a college student using a friend’s credit card. Twenty years later, it’s one of the best decisions I've ever made. blakewatson.com [1] 20 years is a long time to work on something, congrats Blake! So many great links to small web creators, why, and how to build your own site. As algos turn to shit the small web remains a space that cannot be ruined. There will always be rss feeds from real humans writing for other humans. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://blakewatson.com/journal/blakewatson-com-turns-twenty/ [2]: /thoughts/
I recently discovered Termix [1] by Termix-SSH [2], and it’s truly impressive. Termix is a web-based server management platform with SSH terminal, tunneling, and file editing capabilities. References: [1]: https://github.com/Termix-SSH/Termix [2]: https://github.com/Termix-SSH
ThePrimeagen (@ThePrimeagen) on X there is literally no universe that this is true 10k lines and its not bug filled crap? ok Lex Luthor, its time to step away from the keys https://t.co/OMg2Zi9bPs X (formerly Twitter) · x.com [1] there is literally no universe that this is true 10k lines and its not bug filled crap? ok Lex Luthor, its time to step away from the keys Is this 10k real production code? Dry in the sense that it hasn’t re-implemented the same s3 api dozens of time? What language are we talking something dense like python? something very verbose like html [2]? Maybe a language where you implement everything from scratch like lua. This matters a lot. Playing with little POC applications that dont mean anything I can quickly come up with 500-1k likes of code that I may never look at again. I’m sure I can come up wtih 10k decent lines of code a day. But for the same application without duplicating everything over and over? For something that moves the needle and really matters?? every single day?? Consistently +10k, not 10k changes, not 10k deletes of yesterdays code. nah thats wack. Note This post is a thought [3]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else...
If you’re into interesting projects, don’t miss out on nwg-look [1], created by nwg-piotr [2]. GTK3 settings editor adapted to work in the wlroots environment References: [1]: https://github.com/nwg-piotr/nwg-look [2]: https://github.com/nwg-piotr
The Brutalist Report The day brutalist.report [1] Discovered the Brutalist Report from CJ [2] on syntax.fm on their rss-is-not-dead [3] episode. The way he described it, I was like gnaw thats whack, not into it, but I had to check it out. It’s actually great! Except the political shit, I go to rss to get away from political finger pointing. The Hacker News list is great, maybe I need to pay more attention to hacker news?? Note This post is a thought [4]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://brutalist.report/ [2]: https://coding.garden/ [3]: https://syntax.fm/show/926/rss-is-not-dead [4]: /thoughts/
Omarchy is on the move Omarchy has been improving at a furious pace. Since it was first released on June 26, I've pushed out 18(!) new releases together with a rapidly growing community of collaborators, users, and new-t... world.hey.com [1] It’s facinating how many people are making the jump from mac/windows, not just to linux, not just to archlinux, but to a full on tiling window manager. DHH has omakub and omarchy. Omakub is advertised as easy and for beginners, but many are skipping right over that to go straight for the hard stuff. DHH mentions hyprland here, one thing I think he is missing is that this is the first real mainstream tiling window manager that is a competitor to i3, awesomewm, qtile that runs Wayland. I think they were able to pull a bunch of great benefits such as lack of screen tearing and animations from this. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://world.hey.com/dhh/omarchy-is-on-the-move-8f848fa4 [2]: /thoughts/
YouTube has earned its crown I often give Google a lot of shit for shutting down services whenever they're bored, hire a new executive, or face a three-day weekend. The company seems institutionally incapable of standing behin... world.hey.com [1] I wonder how much of killed-by-google [2] is due to is 20 percent time [3]. Allowing engineers to follow a passion project turns into a real product that doesn’t have full backing and support of the company. similar to DHH as much as I am hurt by reader and all of their privacy BS that comes from ad based revenue I appreciate YouTube and them supporting all of the creators on it. Giving a platform for small creators the ability to sustain themselves and reach a larch audience without big coorporate rules. Note This post is a thought [4]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://world.hey.com/dhh/youtube-has-earned-its-crown-48f12ccc [2]: https://killedbygoogle.com/ [3]: https://thoughts.waylonwalker.com/post/787 [4]: /thoughts/
[1] Googles 20 percent time is fascinating to me. It seems like a great way for engineers to fill up their tank with new skills, passion projects, and the need to scratch an itch. To me these days it feels like something that would incentivize good talent to join. I can remember back earlier in my career December and January were slow months for big companies. Riddled with vacation and annual planning cycle. I would use this time to create tools and libraries that would help me move quicker throughout the year. I clearly remember having a conversation with a colleague several salary grades ahead of me come mid February asking what I was up to. I was furiously pecking away at some of these projects while he let me know that he had been waiting for this years plan for months and had no tasks from the boss. That said, I don’t think any major tech company is going to adopt 20% time these days. It’s too chaotic, too hard to manage and impossible to measure. This line from Ted feels exactly why 20 percent time generally blows up and likely turns into another killed-by-google [2] product that has a small user base and is furious about it being killed. With enough of these at least...
Blog tonsky.me · tonsky.me [1] Niki has one of the coolest yet simple personal sites that I have seen in a long time. We need more of this on the internet! hover over his face, try dark mode, submit personal data, there are so many really cool Easter eggs to discover! Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://tonsky.me/ [2]: /thoughts/
We shouldn’t have needed lockfiles Lockfiles are an absolutely unnecessary concept that complicates things without a good reason. Dependency managers can and are working without it just the same. tonsky.me · tonsky.me [1] I wholeheartedly agree that packaging is broken, semver is broken, expecting much better from a system of oss that is built on top of volunteers, passion projects, nights and weekends is a fools errand. With that I disagree that we we dont need lockfiles. Maybe its Nikki’s experience in java and my lack that puts us on this opposite spectrum, but without lockfiles the world changes underneath us as we release. One small change to your source can introduce a whole set of new features/bugs that you did not plan on without a good locking system. It can also cause you to need to do dependency resolution at application build time and not ahead of time. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://tonsky.me/blog/lockfiles/ [2]: /thoughts/
[1] Fantastic write up on their experience in ai, opinions on ai being a hoax with a veil of reasonable usefulness. Arguing that most people do not understand enough to see the difference, and thought leaders see where it is now, see where it was yesterday, it must be going to general intelligence tomorrow and you all will loose your jobs without this. I appreciate the satirical language here. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /static/https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/i-will-fucking-piledrive-you-if-you-mention-ai-again/?ref=wheresyoured.at [2]: /thoughts/
- Letting Ai drive code feels like giving up so much control. It feels like its leaving so many brain cycles open for other things, yet its not quite good enough to do production level things on its own, so we must watch it, we must review it, yet its code can be some of the worst to review left unattended. I’m feeling this right now as I’m avoiding writing a bit of js that I could probably do myself. Some day this is likely to flip, and it will get better and we will spend our brain cycles thinking about architecture, security, marketing, big picture ideas about the problem we are trying to solve, but we are not yet there and as long as we still need to review I find it a much more pleasant workflow to have in a separate window than have it change the whole fucking project for a simple change. Note This post is a thought [1]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: /thoughts/
A quote from greyduet on r/teachers I teach HS Science in the south. I can only speak for my district, but a few teacher work days in the wave of enthusiasm I'm seeing for AI tools … Simon Willison’s Weblog · simonwillison.net [1] Woof, ai is sucking the soul from everything, being forced onto teachers who don’t want or care about it and are simply sharing ai-slop to their kids without giving it much thought. remember that it is rude [2] to share ai-slop with others that you have not vetted, It’s next level to turn this into teaching material for children who are forced into your classroom and have no choice about the matter, you should be ashamed. Note This post is a thought [3]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Aug/5/greyduet-on-rteachers/#atom-everything [2]: https://distantprovince.by/posts/its-rude-to-show-ai-output-to-people/ [3]: /thoughts/
I have a couple of use cases for simple qr codes in python coming up. One is for blog posts, the other is for auth into a new server application logged to a terminal. I tried the qrcode [1] library and it does not look as nice to me and I found pyqrcode [2] to be quite nice. import pyqrcode url = pyqrcode.create('https://waylonwalker.com/qr-codes-in-python') url.svg('qr-codes-in-python.svg', scale=8) print(url.terminal(quiet_zone=1)) url.svg('qr-codes-in-python.svg', scale=12) url.svg('qr-codes-in-python.svg', omithw=True) # width is controlled by the container url.svg('qr-codes-in-python.svg', omithw=True, module_color='#ffd119') url.svg('qr-codes-in-python.svg', omithw=True, module_color='#ff69b4', background='#2b034c') result # [3] Here is the final svg result. Here is what it looks like in the terminal. [4] If you want fancier qrcodes check out https://mydigitalharbor.com/ References: [1]: https://pypi.org/project/qrcode/ [2]: https://pypi.org/project/pyqrcode/ [3]: #result [4]: https://dropper.waylonwalker.com/api/file/c644bd34-b5da-48a3-b6cf-c89efb546114.png
Colors • Pico CSS Pico comes with 380 manually crafted colors to help you personalize your brand design system. Pico CSS · picocss.com [1] A great alternative to tailwind colors that has everything defined in one colors file for only 0.3kb. it feels well worth the weight if you are trying to skip a build step or avoid npm/node. It has even more colors than tailwind. I appreciate that there is a grey palette that is fully desaturated. Note This post is a thought [2]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://picocss.com/docs/colors [2]: /thoughts/
GitHub - rushter/selectolax: Python binding to Modest and Lexbor engines. Fast HTML5 parser with CSS selectors for Python. Python binding to Modest and Lexbor engines. Fast HTML5 parser with CSS selectors for Python. - rushter/selectolax GitHub · github.com [1] Selectolax you have my attention! I will be giving this a try for markata which often suffers from slow beautifulsoup. It appears to have everything I need for my simple use cases. [2] Note This post is a thought [3]. It’s a short note that I make about someone else’s content online #thoughts References: [1]: https://github.com/rushter/selectolax [2]: https://dropper.waylonwalker.com/api/file/b5d8930f-59e0-4947-9500-717f66ce33dc.png [3]: /thoughts/