Just wrapped up Dragon Inn (1967).
I’ve been slowly rolling through King Hu’s oeuvre ever since being tipped off about Touch of Zen (1971) last year (on Mastodon, no less). I’ve enjoyed them all so far, and this one was no exception.
(I will admit that, for this trans-person, the final scene’s obsession with eunuch-taunting probably didn’t land quite as intended ☺️ Thank goodness for all that anthropology training).
Software is ephemeral. Always capture and archive screen recordings of your experience—especially during development.
I deeply regret not capturing a screen recording of the UX for a chat-based multiplayer RPG I wrote years ago.
There were a few interactions I want to demo to others purely for purposes of inspiration, including the multi-modal message send button and the way that transcript history collapsed into cards as quests were completed.
It would be a pain to stand it all up again.
More fun from the archives: article tiling algorithm for a digital magazine layout engine on the first gen iPad.
The content feed was backed by RSS. Google Reader during development, if memory serves.
Aesthetically pleasing layout required conceding that publication date was only one factor in sequencing, but how heavily this factor was weighted depended on the average frequency of publication (the more temporal distance between units, the more important that sequencing be preserved).
“[T]hinking takes place in your brain. * * * It’s here here that the connections are made and the insights are formed. And it is a process that stubbornly resists automation.”
Up until this statement, I was growing concerned that Casey was attempting to outsource the intellectual sine qua non of knowledge. It’s along the edges of the graph where insights live. If you outsource that to a machine, you’ve substituted its thinking for your own. (Contra, a Zettelkasten)
@st3fan Had the soundtrack for that one on all week! Now all I can think is how I want more musical episodes!
@st3fan that was fantastic
You can now open and use SQLite files in Emacs 😎 https://xenodium.com/emacs-29s-sqlite-mode/
@Ultrarunfamily awwwwwwwww 😍
@Impossible_PhD I am amazed and maybe a little saddened at how good of an analogy this is. 😳
@JenWojcik yes!
@gruber @marcoarment @johnvoorhees My biggest complaint about the iPad app on macOS is the SafariViewController => Safari bridge, which throws up a clunky “this link is being opened in Safari” window every time you view web content. I accept the underlying conceit, but it’s a pretty rude kludge.
@gruber @marcoarment @johnvoorhees 👋 I was the maintainer of the Pocket macOS app up until this change. It was a nice app, and a good codebase, but it was getting pretty long in the tooth, and falling behind on features.
🏳️⚧️ Proudly Trans
🌉 Bay Area
Product-Engineering Manager for a software product portfolio; former iOS dev; attorney (CA/IL); large-format photographer; marriage ministress; cinema nut; weeb; lifelong weird girl.
Lover of myths, legends, fairy tales, fantasies, and folklore; 6502 assembly aspirer; book hoarder; gaming nostalgist; gore-adverse, torture-adverse feminist horror film fan; food worshipper; Slack poet; ace-demi-recipro-crier; a total and complete mess.
🍶::🍷::🍺::🍹::🍸