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Curiositry

2,800 karmajoined 11 anni fa
I write and build things.

Essays on technology, philosophy & amateur neuroscience:

www.autodidacts.io

A portfolio of sorts, listing some of my web projects:

www.curiositry.com

@curiositry on GitHub/SourceHut and Twitter.

Submissions

Manna (2003)

marshallbrain.com
1 points·by Curiositry·3 giorni fa·0 comments

Incentives Drive Everything

yusufaytas.com
7 points·by Curiositry·3 giorni fa·0 comments

Life with Hazard Ratios

dynomight.net
3 points·by Curiositry·4 giorni fa·0 comments

Bullet Points and Bold Text

erikjohannes.no
2 points·by Curiositry·5 giorni fa·0 comments

What Should We Optimize Away?

autodidacts.io
5 points·by Curiositry·5 giorni fa·0 comments

Garmin fēnix 8 teardown

f-blog.info
3 points·by Curiositry·10 giorni fa·0 comments

Blink If You're Human

dynomight.net
2 points·by Curiositry·12 giorni fa·0 comments

Better Images of AI

betterimagesofai.org
55 points·by Curiositry·12 giorni fa·31 comments

Side-Stepping the Secretary Problem

evalapply.org
5 points·by Curiositry·12 giorni fa·1 comments

The Usefulness of AI Agents

erikjohannes.no
2 points·by Curiositry·12 giorni fa·0 comments

Hire Me (Taylor) via API

taylor.town
3 points·by Curiositry·12 giorni fa·0 comments

People and Blogs Interview: David Cain, Raptitude

manuelmoreale.com
3 points·by Curiositry·13 giorni fa·0 comments

You're Not Better Than the Screen Watchers

speakandregret.michaelinzlicht.com
3 points·by Curiositry·14 giorni fa·1 comments

Study on the effects of listening to podcasts on headphones vs. speakers

sciencedirect.com
5 points·by Curiositry·14 giorni fa·3 comments

Being a Dad

derekthompson.org
3 points·by Curiositry·14 giorni fa·1 comments

How not to forget what matters

henrikkarlsson.xyz
4 points·by Curiositry·16 giorni fa·2 comments

Are you better than the screen watchers?

sailsandcommas.com
2 points·by Curiositry·16 giorni fa·0 comments

Blogging can just be stating the obvious

blog.jim-nielsen.com
466 points·by Curiositry·16 giorni fa·133 comments

Fear in Four Dimensions

taylor.town
6 points·by Curiositry·17 giorni fa·0 comments

The Secret Life of Circuits by Michal Zalewski (lcamtuf)

nostarch.com
2 points·by Curiositry·17 giorni fa·0 comments

comments

Curiositry
·11 giorni fa·discuss
This was the first Linux I used (mainly, to play Nibbles for Knoppix). The live-boot CD was a treasured belonging. Good times!
Curiositry
·12 giorni fa·discuss
You’re absolutely right!
Curiositry
·12 giorni fa·discuss
There’s Elijah Potter’s HN sans AI: https://elijahpotter.dev/hnsansai
Curiositry
·16 giorni fa·discuss
♫ […] that's that me espresso ♫

Wait, where did all my Vim keybindings go?
Curiositry
·18 giorni fa·discuss
Tell me if you find this! I was thinking the exact same thing.
Curiositry
·24 giorni fa·discuss
Has anyone made a Linux version of this yet? I think Framework laptops and many thinkpads have accelerometers.
Curiositry
·mese scorso·discuss
For a while I have wanted to create a lookup table that maps concepts people describe using computer metaphors to their biological/ecological/??? equivalent, which in some cases might be more accurate, or at least more fresh.

What word would you use for this?
Curiositry
·mese scorso·discuss
It’s https://littlefoot.js.org
Curiositry
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Hey, I'm not affiliated with Cerelog, but I'm the author of the article and those are my typos. Fixed!

Thanks for pointing this out.
Curiositry
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I don't. Except for long-tail keywords, Marginalia Search / Kagi Small Web / Wiby / Million Short are better options, or one of the many blog/small web directories that have made the frontpage in recent months.
Curiositry
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Fish, zoxide, tmux, helix, ripgrep, fd-find, htop. There are many more, but these are the ones that I enjoy using. (Other than tmux.)
Curiositry
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Yes, that's what I tried first. Same issue with trying to allocate more memory than was available.
Curiositry
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Qwen3.5 9b seems to be fairly competent at OCR and text formatting cleanup running in llama.cpp on CPU, albeit slow. However, I have compiled it umpteen ways and still haven't gotten GPU offloading working properly (which I had with Ollama), on an old 1650 Ti with 4GB VRAM (it tries to allocate too much memory).
Curiositry
·4 mesi fa·discuss
- It feels like I know all the efficient keybindings, but when someone looks over my shoulder, I become conscious of how much time I spend mashing Esc/CapsLock and i/I/a/A/o/O, compared to how much editing actually happens.

- I have nomouse mode on, to try to learn modal editors properly. But the mouse is actually fairly fast for getting to a specific cursor position. In theory, using Helix motions could be faster (and there's gw if I don't know what motion to use). In practice, the mental process of turning a point on the coordinate plane into the correct series of motions (including i) feels vastly slower.

Still, Vim, Helix, etc are incredible for structural manipulation of text, and I miss what they provide any time I edit text somewhere else, even with the universal keybindings that are available for navigating/selecting/deleting words, lines, etc. I tried Vim mode in Zed and it just didn't cut it.

Some things about Helix that I particularly like: speed and stability (no weird lag on visual block insert!), the jump to diagnostics/changes pattern (]d <Space>a is a surprisingly nice spellcheck interface, with <Space>d for the overview), the jumplist, and the good-by-default fuzzy pickers.
Curiositry
·4 mesi fa·discuss
This has been my main editor for prose and code for a few years now (Sublime Text -> Atom -> Vim -> Helix). Overall, it has been great. Many LSPs work almost out-of-the-box, and my config is a fraction the size of my old .vimrc.

Surprisingly, it didn’t take that long to update my Vim muscle memory. Days or weeks, maybe? However, I still have mixed feelings about modal editors in general, and most of my gripes with Helix are actually about modal editors and/or console editors in general.

Code folding is a feature I’m still waiting for.
Curiositry
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Last night, I published a directory of indie blog directories on my (indie) blog.

ramkarthikk had built a directory of indie blogs, which included my blog’s RSS feed, and found my directory of directories post in the directory he had built.

This morning, he emailed me with the story of how he found my post, and asked if I’d consider adding his directory to my directory of directories. His directory was so nice I added it to my directory of directories and posted it here :)

This, I think, it how the indieweb is supposed to work.
Curiositry
·5 mesi fa·discuss
This is something I really want to exist. But vibe-coded security tooling? Pretty much the last thing I want.
Curiositry
·5 mesi fa·discuss
No, but I have wanted to implement this on my site, and I have seen examples of it in the wild (maybe even the same one).

It seems like the hard part would be categorizing the posts accurately, and picking the axes to filter.
Curiositry
·5 mesi fa·discuss
https://www.readsomethinginteresting.com/
Curiositry
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Not my product, but I agree it’s confusing. I assume that, like Ollama, it started out with support for one family of models, and then expanded scope and outgrew its name.