Notices by louis (louis@gnusocial.club), page 6
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louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Tuesday, 13-Aug-2019 08:14:03 UTC louis @acommn you are deleted by your request, and cannot read this message but on web -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 23:33:56 UTC louis how is software development? -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 22:46:09 UTC louis https://mastodon.art/@alohasushicore beautiful art works -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 22:45:15 UTC louis I would like to speak about characters, to provide me such as a service, Jabber: louis@gnusocial.club -
Marko Saric (markosaric@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 05-Sep-2018 06:02:38 UTC Marko Saric Medium is no longer offering new custom domains as a feature. Get your own domain name and install a self-hosted blog on it. Stay away from commercial and hosted platforms. That's the best way to be independent, decentralized and stay in control.
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louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 22:06:24 UTC louis does it work? -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 22:01:30 UTC louis Recommending GNU Emacs integrated environment with well documented Emacs Lisp programming language. https://gnusocial.club/url/204026 -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 21:42:07 UTC louis https://gnusocial.club/url/204026 Emacs Lisp: why is the programming language Emacs Lisp so comfortable? !emacs #emacs #lisp @xahlee My thoughts about the programming language Emacs Lisp. Apparently and initially designed to extend the GNU Emacs Editor, Emacs Lisp has grown into fully fledged programming language. Things like CGI, database interfaces, contact management, customer relationship management, project management, and so many other features becomes possible within GNU Emacs. Here is the summary on what I think what makes GNU Emacs and Emacs Lisp so comfortable programming language. -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 18:26:20 UTC louis https://search.jabbercat.org/rooms/ Public XMPP MUC rooms, join and chat# -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 15:25:52 UTC louis @xahlee join Fiverr http://www.fiverr.com/s2/998150afc6 and start providing your services there, you will get many new clients for programming projects -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 15:22:50 UTC louis @xahlee you are master communicator. You only need to find way to provide services to people, many need your services -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Monday, 12-Aug-2019 07:55:40 UTC louis @journeytocoder install #GNU #Emacs from https://www.gnu.org/s/emacs and you have got great programming environment, I am speaking of Emacs #Lisp that you have at disposal for quick programming with great documentation built-in and manual for beginners -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 18:06:41 UTC louis Have fun. When the web took off in the 90's people began designing personal sites with tools such as GeoCities. These spaces had Java applets, garish green background and seventeen animated GIFs. It may have been ugly and badly coded but it was fun. Keep the web weird and interesting.
https://indieweb.org/fun -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 18:06:31 UTC louis Plurality. With IndieWebCamp we've specifically chosen to encourage and embrace a diversity of approaches & implementations. This background makes the IndieWeb stronger and more resilient than any one (often monoculture) approach.
https://indieweb.org/plurality -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 18:06:11 UTC louis 🗿 Longevity. Build for the long web. If human society is able to preserve ancient papyrus, Victorian photographs and dinosaur bones, we should be able to build web technology that doesn't require us to destroy everything we've done every few years in the name of progress.
https://indieweb.org/Longevity -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 18:05:33 UTC louis Modularity. Build platform agnostic platforms. The more your code is modular and composed of pieces you can swap out, the less dependent you are on a particular device, UI, templating language, API, backend language, storage model, database, platform. Modularity increases the chance that at least some of it can and will be re-used, improved, which you can then reincorporate. AKA building-blocks. AKA "small pieces loosely joined".
https://indieweb.org/modularity -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 18:05:23 UTC louis UX and design is more important than protocols, formats, data models, schema etc. We focus on UX first, and then as we figure that out we build/develop/subset the absolutely simplest, easiest, and most minimal protocols & formats sufficient to support that UX, and nothing more. AKA UX before plumbing.
https://indieweb.org/UX https://indieweb.org/design -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 17:56:41 UTC louis @xahlee I just hope they don't sue you or something, but you expressed your opinion. Javascript I never touched, and I don't use it on websites -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 17:54:57 UTC louis @xahlee how dare you protest against corporate powers -
louis (louis@gnusocial.club)'s status on Sunday, 11-Aug-2019 17:54:40 UTC louis @xahlee come on, you point out logical reasonable issue and they are ignorant, why not. Some languages are designed badly, or are centralized without community involvement