vulkd's comments

vulkd | 1 year ago | on: Strandbeest

These are fantastic. Reminds me of the structures ("choruses"?) from "A Topiary" script by Shane Carruth (the same bloke who made Primer). The first act's "pattern-seeking" premise is great, too. I think anyone who enjoys films such as Aronofsky's Pi, Linklater, Kaufman, etc would enjoy at least skimming through the first act.

- Script: https://indiegroundfilms.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/20...

- Script Reviews: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17338551-a-topiary

- Trailer (Not sure if legit) showing the Strandbeest-like creatures: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16vaQ9Tv8Lc

vulkd | 3 years ago | on: Creativity requires solitude

Perhaps not regularly; artworks that are relatively quick to perform are probably more susceptible to this. Anecdotally I’ve known calligraphers to find themselves practicing the same words over and over again out of muscle memory when just doodling or writing without full focus. I find similarities between this and sports, or even games such as counter-strike. Same map, same mechanics, slightly different flow each time.

On the subject of creativity, I (like many others Im sure) have found travelling to be great for creativity, alone or otherwise! There was an article linked here a while ago about a person who embarked on “staycations” where they just remained confined to their hotel room explicitly to enhance their writing.

vulkd | 5 years ago | on: Port knocking

One-time knocking via changing the ports for every connection / every X seconds with a OTP is something else you can do to further contribute to the defense-in-depth idea. Port knocking is great on it's own, but curious to hear from those who have set it up this way. Love the 'honey port' idea mentioned elsewhere in the thread.

vulkd | 6 years ago | on: Ask HN: What can Firefox do to get you to make the switch?

This seemed like a trivial thing until I made the switch back to Firefox as a main browser after n years. It is difficult without this feature.

Safari displays an "all tabs" view when zooming out at 100% zoom (kinda mobile-esque), making Chrome's method is the smoothest in my experience. It's just done so well.

Firefox (dev edition, at least) contains some 'pinch' settings in it's about:config prefs that enable a somewhat usable pinch-to-zoom. It's a bit clunky, broken on some sites, reflows content sometimes, and clicking or selecting text almost never works when zoomed in. But it's usable, and great to see it make it into the browser without needing an extension, even with it's caveats.

I'd love if Sublime Text or VS Code had this feature, but iirc anything even similar would be far off even with plugins/extensions.

Other than gestures... Tree-Style tabs is the absolute killer 'feature' for me. Vertical tabs are amazing.

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