amosj | 3 months ago | on: Thin desires are eating life
amosj's comments
amosj | 5 months ago | on: ADS-B Exposed
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you explain the sloppiness of modern software?
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Can artificially altered clouds save the Great Barrier Reef?
(note: I am absolutely for trying to save the great barrier reef, and I'm not qualified to judge the feasibility or consequences of this approach, so no moral or other judgement intended. If it can be made to work without breaking Earth production, I hope it gets merged)
amosj | 4 years ago | on: DuckDuckGo hits 100 billion all time searches
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Show HN: Combat social media addiciton with foreign wikipedias
This is an app I built to help me combat the (previously!) firmly-established habit of pulling out my phone to read the news / reddit whenever I had 5 minutes of downtime. The idea is to channel that energy in a more productive direction: instead of opening XYZNews for the nth time I'll try reading wikipedia - but in a different language. That way I'll learn something new about the world, practice that language, and not blindly stare at the news feed hoping something interesting came up since the last time I looked at it 1 hour ago.
The app offers sources of content in a foreign language (by default wikipedia but any website can be added) and a built-in dictionary, which is activated by double-tapping a word [1]. It's actually worked quite well, and though I do still read HN I've drastically reduced the number of times I compulsively open news websites.
Fun fact, some wikipedia versions (e.g. Italian) have a "quote of the day". Those have become my favorites. Otherwise all pages have an "article of the day" which is often interesting.
As mentioned the websites are configurable. The languages/dictionaries are hardcoded (mostly wordreference), but trivial to add by modifying the source. The built-in browser is sometimes buggy and gets dizzy if it follows too many redirects, but it builds in Android Studio and otherwise works fine most of the time[2]. Any feedback welcome!
(note: no ads, no sign-in, no data is collected by the app)
(disclosure: I've allowed myself to resubmit this because the last title did not show the relevance to the subject of battling social media addiction, which I think is of interest. I believe this is allowed within the site's guidelines)
[1] Although e.g. Chrome has a built in integration with wordreference, it still requires too many clicks.
[2] might crash if you cross the international dateline in a canoe. I mean it might. If you try please let me know.
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Brian Kernighan's Home Page
I wonder if that's been effective. I suppose the targets are students at Princeton so once repeated enough, on his web page and elsewhere, it'll make using his name less profitable.
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Dark Crystal
Do any have a (different) key technological component or do they mostly rely on other non-technology-based trust channels like a notary or a lawyer, as other comments have mentioned?
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Building a Desktop App in 2022
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Show HN: Wikireader – website reader with a built-in dictionary
Wikireader is inspired by two facts:
- I like learning foreign languages
- Some (most) days I will open certain news sites more times than I'd like to admit, "just to check if there's something interesting"
This app is an attempt to channel that energy in a more productive direction. Instead of opening XYZNews for the nth time I'll try reading wikipedia - but in a different language. That way I'll learn something new about the world AND practice that language. At least that's the idea. Sometimes it even works.Although e.g. Chrome has a built in integration with wordreference, it still requires too many clicks. So I rolled my own. This has been sitting on a dusty shelf for a while. But it still builds in Android Studio, so I thought I'd share. Any feedback welcome!
Fun fact, some wikipedia versions have a "quote of the day". Those have become my favorites.
The list of websites is configurable, so one could use it for other websites too - by default each language has wikipedia and a news site. The built-in browser is sometimes buggy and gets dizzy if it follows too many redirects.
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Making Emacs Popular Again (2020)
amosj | 4 years ago | on: I made my own garum
> Garum is a fermented fish sauce which was used as a condiment in the cuisines of Phoenicia, ancient Greece, Rome, Carthage and later Byzantium. Liquamen is a similar preparation, and at times they were synonymous. [...] Like the modern fermented soy product soy sauce, fermented garum is a rich source of umami flavoring due to the presence of glutamates.
There's also this wonderful list of fish sauces on wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fish_sauces
Fish-sauce-bar, the next big thing?
amosj | 4 years ago | on: A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge (1992)
"You want a deepness that endures, a deepness that [we] can depend on? there is a deepness in the sky, and it extends forever"
it's got VR headsets, distributed computers - hacking plays a major role. Only way it could be better is if I could forget the plot so I could read it again
amosj | 4 years ago | on: Why is everything so hard in a large organization?
amosj | 4 years ago | on: A different kind of keyboard
amosj | 4 years ago | on: That time I told my wife I wanted to quit my job