Protip: the space between the UI control and the label should be done using padding (or achieved via label nesting) so that the entire area is clickable.
[ x ] some long label
ꜛꜛꜛ
padding here, not margins or gaps
(clicking between the control and the label does nothing now)
a) It’s insane how little we pay for browsers given their utility.
b) Many people would be happy to pay extra for a browser to support free access for others (The Guardian was a decent example of that IIRC).
I wish they shared some links, regardless how small and unfinished the work is! Seeing the process is often more interesting to me than the finished product instead. Also, it’s an easier way of getting more focus: if it’s out there, it’s real and not 100% under your control. (We tend to be more scared of the emotions/feelings we might might experience rather than what would cause them)
"We tend to be more scared of the emotions/feelings we might might experience rather than what would cause them"
You nailed it. Keeping it private allows the fear to grow, but shipping it makes it just a "thing" in the world. Here's my first prototype: https://seton.run
It's a very simple Pomodoro-ish timer, but designed to visualize your accumulated effort. Seeing the concrete data of "time spent" creates a positive feedback loop that helps me stick to the finish line.
I'll check out your list. It seems we are exploring the same problem space.
The repo contains links to: OPML (bulk import into RSS readers), Markdown (clickable links), and CSV/JSON
It's not perfect, some feeds are not being captured, then some sites publish multiple feeds whereas I pull just one atm. I'll share a writeup once I clean it up a bit, but I hope it's useful / entertaining in the meantime.
I keep a separate list of people I know, or met via HN in my RSS reader, so I'll needs to review/clean it up anyway. ok I'm late for a gig, bye!
I'd say “wasteful” diversity move == woke in this context, not sure if that's milder. Just another distraction thrown at us to keep us at each other's throats. (+ keeping better alignment with the carrot man's branding)
Psychoanalysing politicians aside, serif fonts used to be considered more legible, but that doesn't hold any more that much (e.g. much of research shows that people tend to underestimate familiarity when assessing legibility).
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