@anthonydpaul @nathanacurtis 18th Century Browser Tabs
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@anthonydpaul @nathanacurtis 18th Century Browser Tabs
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@round @feedly Feel free to add: http://gregwalsh.com/blog/ and you would be my 1st non-me subscriber
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@round What RSS reader do you use?
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I made a marker holder for my white board: https://gregwalsh.com/blog//2021/02/I-Made-This-Marker-Holder-for-your-Board.html
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@round snark free comment: I went over the TiVo’s Pause button with my students. The entire physical interface was built around the core interaction of pausing.
It’s really a great example of user-based and activity-based design.
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I’ve been reconfiguring my desk to accomodate my research, design, and teaching work. One of the favorite features of my home office is the
two giant walls with whiteboard “paint”. Of course, the big downside to walls of white boards instead of framed white boards is the lack of a tray for the markers. I’ve
tried to keep them on my desk but I kept losing them. I decided to build a marker holder to help. I plan on sticking it to the wall with command strips.
@KevinACross Iβve been playing with it for 7 years and used to mine it. It doesnβt get patched as much as it splits code bases to move on. New variants are sometimes formed from the parts left over.
I think itβs as trustworthy as fiat currency is trustworthy.
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RT @Carnage4Life: Me trying to exit vi after years of being a hardcore Emacs user https://t.co/ToNp0whCRa

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I’m excited to start my fellowship in @theRSAorg!
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RT @Carnage4Life: Walt Disney was the grandfather of reusing your library code across different projects. #DRY #programming https://t.co/Qβ¦
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