Oof, and they were my favourite browser, after EWW (the Emacs Web Wowser).
Grickle is the best spooky cartoon artist I have ever seen.
I do not get the joke. Could you dissect this joke for me, please?
DEEP GNOME-Texas Dungeon Siege-May 4th, 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FP9_XmmmIk0
#dungeonsynth
I'm more into goblins myself.
Lustmord ā Much Unseen Is Also Here (2024, Pelagic Records)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-omfuBabf8
#drone #darkambient
Ooh ooh that is Barlowe's picture books!
Wonderful people of the fediverse, please find below the rant of the month. Here is a small excerpt:
... spending half of the planet's engineering efforts to add chatbot support to every application under the sun when half of the industry hasn't worked out how to test database backups regularly.
I Will Fucking Piledrive You If You Mention AI Again
https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/i-will-fucking-piledrive-you-if-you-mention-ai-again/
So which is it? llms killed the code ninja or are llms a bubble?
Is this satire?
Smiling Friends is the best kids cartoon I have ever watched.
More liberal westerners should talk with ex-muslim apostates. It would clear their moral confusion right up.
nostr:npub1w66s7p9m6ye68r8ruahta9h3vuf9pckrsewgutg4rwfgdetf4skskhrc58
I have poped up a window some time ago with g-golf. Had to modify the example from the doc. Dont remember what
Next time you manage to do that, blog post (or forum post)!
I had that moment in my life. It was horrible.
I just published a tool called smatch that I've wanted for a while now. A grep-like tool to do pattern matching on S-expressions (#lisp) using #regex-like syntax for trees.
It also has recursive patterns, so you can pattern match with patterns that look like grammars.
My end goal is to use them for #SMTLIB but it should still work for most lisps (clojure being an exception).
The code and an x86_64-linux static binary are here: https://github.com/geezee/smatch
Thank you.
My very first blog is still online and its name clearly states what I focused on: Lisp Propulsion Laboratory log.
I published the blog from July of 2005 to March of 2007. The site is a time capsule from an era at the long tail of the AI winter, when activity in the Lisp community was at its lowest before a new beginning.
http://www.paoloamoroso.it/log
#blogging #blogs #lisp
New beginning of AI or Lisps? Are we in a Lisp spring?



