Raining outside at @TheLeadDev London, but we've got you covered. ☔
We're on the floor today with umbrellas. Come find us - not stopping by would be a pour decision.
I've added a :terminal-preview: attribute to acdc (https://t.co/GiKZ9fTIcW) that uses libghostty-vt to generate html with the actual terminal with the right ansi colors 👌
#asciidoc#asciidoctor#libghostty
The stars aligned in Washington the other week 😉
We recently held our annual company-wide offsite. This time, it was something different: Camp Inc.
Enter: axe-throwing, archery, river floats, ATVs, hikes, and lots more. Feeling grateful for opportunities like these ❤️🔥
@timClicks Agree! Funnily enough, we have this in our statuspage product at https://t.co/np2FJVvEQV! We can detect if your statuspage hosted with us is getting abnormal traffic and auto start an incident for you 🙏
Earlier this year, we shipped a number of changes to make it faster to calculate who's on call.
We cut our CPU usage by 50% with some simple changes, but struggled to make a meaningful difference until we gave it to Opus 4.6 🧵 (1/7)
Very proud to see Duffel Cars launch today.
Flights and Stays gave our partners a faster way to build travel into their products. Cars makes that experience more complete — helping them support travellers from booking to arrival and beyond.
Today we’re launching Duffel Cars 🚗
Partners can now embed car rentals from 40 providers, including Avis, Sixt, Enterprise, Hertz and Europcar, across 40,000+ locations in 200 countries — through the same Duffel API they use for Flights and Stays.
My gosh, the moment I saw this, my mind for some reason immediately jumped to the Voynich manuscript.
And lo and behold, this is awesome.
https://t.co/aqlVyiviYQ
Imagine every pixel on your screen, streamed live directly from a model. No HTML, no layout engine, no code. Just exactly what you want to see.
@eddiejiao_obj, @drewocarr and I built a prototype to see how this could actually work, and set out to make it real. We're calling it Flipbook. (1/5)
I've started doing some performance work on https://t.co/fAMTv5iHna and I'm quite happy.
For small files, acdc (rust) is still slightly worse than asciidoctor (ruby). I need to tackle that.
For big files (250Mb), acdc is 23x faster for parsing, and 1.8x faster for conversion.
I did a think again with WASM using Claude Code.
In order to commemorate Artemis II checking out the Moon, I've adjusted https://t.co/xhGBeXRNLc homepage to show (yes, using NASA data from their OEM file) its trajectory.
@zeddotdev If you ever decide to do the same for AsciiDoc, I'd love to help. I've been working exactly on this (in WASM) https://t.co/aepQywHdCz (and parsers,toolkits etc at https://t.co/fAMTv5iHna
While I was waiting in a park bench, I decided to update my 404 page.
Ended up vibe coding an ASCII dungeon crawler for it: https://t.co/QFekf4s6sr
It's all in WASM. If you get to the end you get to pick where to go. It's pretty cool what you can do with a phone these days.
For the first time in 28y I spend more time in Claude code than I do in Emacs.
Literally Emacs is used for Magit (btw @bcherny if Claude code got something like magit incorporated holy gosh, 🤯) and just focussed writing mode but not long coding sessions anymore.
I've been thinking about the specific point in time my brain landed on thinking AI in software development is not a fad.
And, hear me out, I think it's because of Emacs.
I want to do a post one day about this but I've been using Emacs since 97-98 and nothing ever moved me away
Not VS code, not vim (yes, I know vim and use it daily tyvm, this is not a post about editors), not the various plugins of editors. Not copilot and auto completion. Not emojis, etc. Emacs just got along and evolved.
But since Claude Code came out?