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Cute, reminds me of the classic pointerpointer.com.

I was slightly disappointed that you didn't go cross-eyed when I moved the mouse between your eyes.


Unfortunately, I didn’t take that photo


Generative AI for the win


You don't need overengineered generative AI, just photoshop half of the left-looking and half of the right-looking photo together


Well I've done something now...


You nailed the aesthetics perfectly! I've been using Godot for years now so I was happy to see such a huge influx of developers after the Unity drama.


Your post inspired me to do some research on options for blocking these sites and I stumbled upon the uBlacklist browser add-on. It's open source, easily configurable, supports multiple search engines, and you can even use community block-lists instead of building your own.


I did find it strange that in most of the footage the pipes seemed to be tightly sealed with screws, adhesive, and in some cases what looked to be foam. It makes me wonder if there was some sort of vacuum required for this demo.


Out of curiosity, are you an "inner monologue" type of person?


What reasoning is behind the question?


yes.


http://eliot-jones.com:5690/Home/Trend?id=--&allwords=true

Searching for "--" results in an Error page.


Thanks for the bug report, I should probably add some front end validation for the search term since in the current design Lucene will only index letters and numbers (which is a problem for searching languages like C++).


> magical internet money we know as Bitcoin


Your ranking list can be interpreted in two very different ways depending on whether you consider ">" to be an arrow or a greater-than sign.


I rarely put anything on my Desktop, but I'm curious to see if I can somehow apply them globally to all of my folders.


I have been trying to, it's pretty neat!


The idea of open source recipes on GitHub is so charming to me.


Tangent: I’m a programmer who currently works as a cook. Kitchens are operating systems and many principles from OS design are applicable if you want to streamline service. Instead of programs, the kitchen must run multiple orders concurrently and efficiently. Containers, lowboys, refrigerators and the walk-in cooler are different cache/memory levels and become smaller the closer they are to your station. Batch processing (cooking, plating, finishing, etc.) will increase throughput, but sometimes latency is more important (you might want to immediately plate and finish an order if the customer has been waiting an hour). If chef says “on the fly” they want that order to preempt any existing orders in progress.

The term “operating system” might seem overly general but I think it’s pretty apt.


That's because some of those principles used in computer science are adopted from older disciplines.


I agree. I especially like the idea of branching recipes, being able to find spicier, sweeter, etc. versions of the main branch.


Not to mention, branches containing ingredient substitutions considerate of allergy-free/religious/moral dietary needs.


Also pull requests for pork! SCNR.


Pulled pork?


Open sauce


Less to me, because the product is the source. Github here is the way for distribution. It is a fairly nice medium for markdown files and without ads, but dedicated recipe sites have recommendations, comments and sometimes ways to directly order the ingredients.


Oh god yes.

I love cooking but soo many recipe sites are absolutely unusable due to ads.


You still have to build it from source with local dependencies.


Another place for open source recipes is wikibooks:

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cookbook:Table_of_Contents


So, basically every recipe site ever? If a recipe is posted on the internet, then it is, by definition "open source." Or are you referring to recipes posted with permissive, copy-left licenses, or are you referring to something else?


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