see shy jo is a user on octodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

@technomancy the appimages I've seen use the system libc, so will break when there's sufficient version skew. Otherwise decent for what it is.

Backup archives are IMHO underappreciated. Like these that I still have:

kite.04.aug.1999.disk.2.tar@ kite.1999.disk.2.tar@ kite.sep1999.disk.2.tar@
kite.04Aug1999.disk.1.tar@ kite.sep1999.disk.1.tar@ kite.sep1999.disk.3.tar@

Archiving my backup of a backup into a git-annex repo

Backing up my backup of a backup.

Gaisky is the ephemeris I always wanted. Millions of real stars, in 3d!
zah.uni-heidelberg.de/institut

(Free software plz package it)

@samis copy and paste of the url works

@calvin I fully bundle the stock libc, without needing chroot. So.

That's the Linux build of git-annex, not targeting Android at all. Built on my Debian home router actually.

OMG. git-annex-standalone.tar.gz JUST WORKS IN TERMUX

I knew I was onto something with joeyh.name/blog/entry/complete

@cwebber GNURoot would probably be a good next step on making that easy to use. It uses proot to chroot and mount --bind without root access.

Android is my least-favorite linux distribution.

Managed to root an old samsung android tablet, by following an intersection of all the different forum posts (all of which were wrong or missing information).

Not planning a new forum post of my own.

@cwebber haskell (green) threads need around 778 bytes, so that's pretty impressive!

Back from a 14 mile bike ride along the river with spring flowers everywhere.

... But, it's probably good if your FRP home automation framework has good support for time varying events. So.

Just spent 3 hours writing FRP code to drive a motion activated light.

I loathe motion activated lights.

Writing control code for the chest freezer to fridge conversion that I've been too lazy to actually get delivered yet using and functional reactive programming.

@brennen one of the beautiful things about scuttlebutt is git-ssb, which not only lets git repos be published fully p2p, but has a web interface for browsing repos and issue tracking that looks just like github.

You run the web interface on localhost, and issues you file there get published p2p like any other scuttlebutt message.