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so you're telling me I can (theoretically) have a full Alpine Linux installation in just the CPU? I'm impressed

I really like the style with the monospace font and the catppuccin theme. the UI is smooth and very simple. maybe too simple.

that said, I got a network error after downloading nearly half of the playlist, and now I have to start over. I will blame my network for it, but I'd like to have a stronger retry mechanism.


I really like the idea, as well as the "terminal" style the site has. however, I consider that an additional daily spend of $2 could be avoided. perhaps by caching common questions (like "what is this?"), or by using free tiers on API providers.

or, maybe I'm just too cost-conscious.

either way, the API limit is currently your "Achilles' heel", as it has already caused the bot to stop responding.


even better, selfhost your own gitea instance

How do other people open pull/merge requests for your projects?

Honest question: do you want them to? Most of us aren't running high-profile OSS projects, and drive-by PRs are a pretty widespread complaint about GitHub's model of opensource

Just push to that instance, or, as Linus intended, send patches via e-mail.

They make an account or you give them one?

i have my own personal website which i customized to my own liking (catppuccin theme, walking pet, music player [with animations and iOS-like blur effects], etc.) and even added a tiny blog section, where i usually post, well, anything i'd post on traditional, centralized social media.

i made it so, if something is relevant enough (i.e. it is something i'm actually proud of, or is something with enough quality), it is posted on my site first, and just then reposted to other platforms. i even added a rss feed if anyone wanted.

and last but not least, i optimized it so it loads within less than 512kb (333kb as of writing this, i might add or remove more stuff in the future that might change the total size), and it is fully functional on devices as old as Android 6 (i don't have anything older to test, sorry about that).


seeing games being showcased in Hacker News is both a rare and a nice thing.

they're usually included with some kind of blog/tech demo explaining how they were done, or including a link to the AI model used (if it applies), or some stuff like that; so it was pretty strange for me to see nothing like that.

all that said, the game is fairly simple, the UI and controls are pretty good, and it can be fun for a short time.


this reminds me of "i have no mouth and i must scream". it's incredible, but also very eerie.


i'm sure your react site is fine, but there's a difference between a static site and a site with a blog, music player, custom (lightweight) telemetry. i chose adding as much features as i could fit in that limited space.


I don't see the issue with this. tiktok DMs were made for sharing videos directly to someone, and reacting to those, not as a primary chatting method.

if you think otherwise, I'd like you to explain why is the experience optimized for video sharing, yet the text messages are unoptimized.


I was expecting to encounter the metro UI, so I got a pleasant surprise when I saw the 360's UI.


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