(no title)
xelxebar | 1 month ago
- Main developer is blind, so accessibility has priority;
- Easily scriptable; think automating captive portal clickthroughs;
- Reading articles (e.g. Wikipedia) feels closer to reading a book;
- It even supports JavaScript to a degree!
- The affordances of line-oriented editing carry over nicely.
In particular, when using line-oriented interfaces, it's quite natural to build up a small collection of context-dependent snippets from documentation, source code, sample code, whatever. Putting a small collage of these on the screen is effortless and an experience I do miss with other UI paradigms.The main developer appears to tinker on the project daily and is quite nice to chat with over on libera's #edbrowse. The project does have a small, dedicated following, but I wish more people knew about it!
ploum|1 month ago
I’ve a perfect sight myself but I really like the comfort of linearity with CLI: I ask my computer something, I receive an answer.
(that’s probably why I’m developping my own CLI browser but is more graphical and less advanced than edbrowse)
stronglikedan|1 month ago
I'm not sure how you could infer that, since OP didn't mention "TUI" or "GUI" or "CLI" anywhere in this post, and a text-based browser UI could come in either form.
isametry|1 month ago
So based on the first paragraph, I would’ve assumed “CLI” and “graphical” were mutually exclusive? Did you in fact mean to type “TUI” here? Or is your program something like a hybrid between command-based input and graphical output?
thereWasAFish|1 month ago
Never thought about it before, but doing development work as a blind person sounds extremely impressive.
Vision is just such a fast and easy way to acquire information. Without it, it seems quite difficult to check your existing code, easily read prior documentation, take notes, and just various other conveniences that one take for granted.
I'm sure there are various tools and methods to ameliorate these problems, but still.
adi_kurian|1 month ago
cess11|1 month ago
I usually go with w3m for my weirder needs that lie somewhere between a pure HTTP client and a regular web browser, this seems like it might be even more convenient sometimes.
disqard|1 month ago
jasonm23|1 month ago
anthk|1 month ago
In Europe most people played Earthbound (and USA only releases for SNES/MD) under emulators. That's how Nintendo put it in the Super Smash Bros roster. They say the hate emulation; but these tools cemented themselves into retroemulation like no other system, and helped to bring new sagas to the West. For free. You say you lost money because of retro-piracy? You got free marketing for physical scraps technically resting in a warehouse.
Altough nowadays I'm 100% pro libre gaming; tons of indie/FOSS philosophy overlap: FreedroidRPG, Battle for Wesnoth, Nethack/Slashem, ReTux, SuperTux2...
Back to edbrowse, it's a mail, irc and SQL client too; and you can script it, a la ed/vi, so you can do magic here.