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Elias Mårtenson
91eeae4b1c813861a59f3eeea96dce64548560dd6df2cf058cea564655e3cc1a
Lisp, Emacs, APL and a bunch of other stuff. From Sweden, living in Singapore. I always work on a bunch of projects. My current major ones are: A graphical frontend to Maxima: https://github.com/lokedhs/maxima-client Kap: An APL-based programming language: https://codeberg.org/loke/array #lisp #commonlisp #apl #retrocomputing #linux #kap #climaxima #emacs #atari #fedi22

nostr:npub15c7g2z0hanhkrzgfrpdmjxeewg0203p00j6avlwz5hg2es2q0ems4lsuze Wow. That looks amazing. I think I'll buy this. I hope the gameplay lives up to the visuals.

nostr:npub168303eezkmd40tdp5kvpaapr5uky8s66u6uaexz5qr334ft77jrsvaf0qg To me, the main issue is that once again the US is incompatible with the rest of the world.

Now, I know that the charging ports were already incompatible, so sticking with the US version of the CCS port wouldn't really be much of a difference.

I've been reading up of electronics and circuit design, and I find it very interesting. However, I don't have any hardware to experiment with at the moment, and I'd probably break things even if I did.

Is there a simple circuit simulation tool I can use to learn how to build simple things?

I don't need a full design tool, and I just want something that is simple and easy so that I can test things as I read about them.