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authorAdam T. Carpenter <atc@53hor.net>2021-05-23 21:52:56 -0400
committerAdam T. Carpenter <atc@53hor.net>2021-05-23 21:52:56 -0400
commita1eda32d9856e3ed5e06de73c9bc194f81891697 (patch)
tree6897d61cf138491b03fc2aef8adc3772e813a04a /drafts
parent5a3fcb09a6a139a508b077b4c4e5a546b8f0aabd (diff)
download53hor-a1eda32d9856e3ed5e06de73c9bc194f81891697.tar.xz
53hor-a1eda32d9856e3ed5e06de73c9bc194f81891697.zip
added a bunch and published bad animated page titles
Diffstat (limited to 'drafts')
-rw-r--r--drafts/html-for-docs-2020.html74
-rw-r--r--drafts/it's not rust vs go.html46
-rw-r--r--drafts/what happens when you remove js from your site.html0
-rw-r--r--drafts/why does everyone insist on using adobe acrobat?.html69
4 files changed, 109 insertions, 80 deletions
diff --git a/drafts/html-for-docs-2020.html b/drafts/html-for-docs-2020.html
index a33bb51..8b5462e 100644
--- a/drafts/html-for-docs-2020.html
+++ b/drafts/html-for-docs-2020.html
@@ -1,20 +1,72 @@
-<h1>Document Writing: MD? LaTeX? WINWORD.EXE? Nope, just HTML</h1>
+<h1>Writing Documents: Markdown? LaTeX? WINWORD.EXE? Nope, just HTML</h1>
<p>
<img src="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/XaZRfgK3G7ZzWbs/preview" />
</p>
-<p>The year is 2020 and I write the majority of my documents in HTML.</p>
+<p class="description">
+ I've been without MS Word for quite a few years since I switched away from
+ Windows and honestly I haven't needed it. I took notes and wrote documents in
+ Markdown for a while. That was alright because the syntax is easy and any text
+ editor can read a Markdown file. Sometimes I need shareable formatting, so
+ recently I started using HTML for all documents I intend to share, upload, or
+ print.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ The year is 2021 and I write all my formatted documents in HTML. It sounds
+ needless but if you think about it it makes a lot of sense. HTML after all was
+ designed to be the streaming document of choice when the web was introduced to
+ the world. So it's tailor-made for shareable, digital documents.
+ <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/html52/"
+ >Over the years the specification has gotten larger</a
+ >, and most of the syntax required by a typical user is present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ But why bother? What are the "benefits"? Well, HTML is ubiquitous. And by that
+ I mean literally <em>everyone</em> can read an HTML document because literally
+ everyone has a web browser installed. Friends don't have Word? Use Google
+ Docs? Use Apple Pages? Forget it. I bet you all of those folks have a web
+ browser that was made after 1999. That means they can all read your document,
+ either by visiting it on your site or receiving it in an email.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ What's easier than reading HTML is writing it. Anyone with a text editor can
+ do it. Heck, even those folks with Word installed can save their documents as
+ [reasonable] HTML. And the tags aren't that hard to learn. I don't think that
+ Markdown is an easier syntax to learn and understand. HTML's tags are only
+ slightly more verbose and the structure is a pro, not a con. It's certainly
+ easier than writing a document in LaTeX. I would even argue in some ways it's
+ easier than working with a WYSIWYG editor. At least the formatting you're
+ looking for isn't getting shuffled from menu to sub-menu.
+</p>
-- Literally everyone can read an HTML document because literally everyone has a
-web browser installed - Anyone can print out an HTML document - Anyone can edit
-an HTML document - Writing a document in HTML is easier than writing one in Word
-or Latex
+<p>
+ Sometimes folks want a PDF instead. Okay, fine. For whatever reason PDFs are
+ the reigning document of the land. That doesn't mean you need Adobe Acrobat or
+ some custom setup involving
+ <code>wkhtmltopdf</code>. Or even worse, some strange LaTeX middleware via
+ <code>pandoc</code>. You don't need any of that! The best PDF reader in the
+ world, MuPDF, also comes with <code>mutool</code>.
+ <code>mutool convert [options] file [pages]</code> will convert a variety of
+ formats to or from a PDF. And the results look terrific going from an HTML to
+ a PDF. If you want, you can customize the results by writing CSS into
+ <code>@media print</code> queries. Automate the creation with a script when
+ you safe the underlying document. Sky's the limit!
+</p>
<p>
- I've been without Word for a few years since I switched away from Windows and
- honestly I haven't needed it. I took notes and wrote documents in Markdown for
- a while. That was alright because the syntax is easy and any text editor can
- read a Markdown file. Recently however, I've started using HTML for writing
- documents that I intend to upload, print, or send to other users. Here's why.
+ But what about presentations or slideshows? Surely, the "minimal" solution is
+ to use something like Suckless' <code>sent</code> right? Well, you can also do
+ slideshows in HTML! Just a little CSS and some <code>section</code> and
+ <code>a</code> tags and you've got a click-able, full-browser slideshow with
+ images, links, titles, icons, flowcharts, embedded videos, and a printable
+ slide deck. And the best part is that you can instantly share online by
+ dropping it into a public web root. You don't have to use Google Slides or
+ some other third-party slide creator online that none of your friends use.
+ Heck, Suckless <code>sent</code> is just that: yet another slideshow tool that
+ does one thing and nobody but you has it installed. Your HTML slides are
+ <em>just as plain text</em> as a <code>sent</code> deck.
</p>
diff --git a/drafts/it's not rust vs go.html b/drafts/it's not rust vs go.html
index 6826d55..c9273ff 100644
--- a/drafts/it's not rust vs go.html
+++ b/drafts/it's not rust vs go.html
@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
<h1>"Rust or Go?" is not the question</h1>
<h1>Part 2: (But Rust is definitely the answer)</h1>
+<h1>Part 3: Rust is definitely production ready</h1>
-> part 2 include coworker conversation tidbits draft notes:
<ul>
<li>These are two very different languages</li>
@@ -71,6 +72,32 @@
<a href="https://killedbygoogle.com/"> Killed by Google</a>
+<a href="https://dart.dev/overview">The Dart Programming Language</a>
+
+<a
+ href="https://blog.discord.com/why-discord-is-switching-from-go-to-rust-a190bbca2b1f?gi=c8caad873419"
+ >Discord swapped Go for Rust</a
+>
+
+<blockquote>
+ Both Microsoft and Amazon have just recently announced and released their new
+ officially supported Rust libraries for interacting with Windows and AWS.
+ Official first party support for these massive APIs helps make Rust people's
+ first choice when deciding what to use for their project.
+</blockquote>
+<a href="https://blog.rust-lang.org/2021/05/15/six-years-of-rust.html"
+ >Source</a
+>
+
+<a href="https://hub.packtpub.com/is-dart-programming-dead-already/"
+ >Dart -- apples to oranges? I'm not trying to say that go is going the way of
+ dart, I'm trying to say that industry-leading companies aren't always stewards
+ of their creations. take FreeBSD. It's a thriving, excellent operating system
+ capable of "industry-leading company" usage. See the usuals (Netflix, Sony,
+ etc). Look at the FreeBSD foundation. Now look at RedHat and IBM. Again,
+ apples to oranges? No, just a bad argument to make in the first place.</a
+>
+
<p>quotables</p>
<blockquote>
@@ -85,6 +112,19 @@
apps. Rust can be better for a single-thread app or general "systems"
programming.
</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+ Rust is not a "systems programming" language. Systems programming is not a
+ genre of languages. It's not like saying Italian is a "Romantic language".
+ Systems programming is a specific, targeted programming *application*. It's
+ the destination, the use-case that a language is being applied to. Rust is a
+ general-purpose programming language. I have used it to write a variety of
+ tools, low- and high-level, server-side and client-side, graphical and CLI.
+ Yes, I used it for some systems programming. Also used it to make a very
+ simple and robust web service digested by a variety of other developers at our
+ company.
+</p>
+
<blockquote>
The only way is to learn and try both. That's what I did. Most of the info
from both sides is biased...Go is definitely very fast and [garbage
@@ -102,3 +142,9 @@
next year or two on which direction things end up going. For Rust to benefit
long-term, it needs the support of a corporate backer
</blockquote>
+
+<p>Rust is absolutely ready for production use.</p>
+<p>
+ Anti-Rust zealotry is just as strong as pro-Rust zealotry. The hype goes both
+ ways. No, your talking points shouldn't come from Reddit.
+</p>
diff --git a/drafts/what happens when you remove js from your site.html b/drafts/what happens when you remove js from your site.html
deleted file mode 100644
index e69de29..0000000
--- a/drafts/what happens when you remove js from your site.html
+++ /dev/null
diff --git a/drafts/why does everyone insist on using adobe acrobat?.html b/drafts/why does everyone insist on using adobe acrobat?.html
deleted file mode 100644
index c2a5504..0000000
--- a/drafts/why does everyone insist on using adobe acrobat?.html
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
-<h1>Why Does Everyone Use Adobe Acrobat [Reader]?</h1>
-
-<p>
- This is something that I've never been able to figure out. All through high
- school I had to use PDFs. And if you wanted to open a PDF, everyone understood
- that you needed Adobe Acrobat Reader. Even web sites where you downloaded PDFs
- insisted that in order to open them, you were going to have to follow a
- download link to make sure you have Acrobat on your PC.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Fast-forward a few years into college and I'm using PDFs more than ever. Every
- professor ever is scanning and uploading course material, so out comes Acrobat
- Reader for literally every teacher and student. At this point I was actually
- used to using Firefox (PDF.js) to view PDFs for a couple of reasons. First of
- all, Firefox usually opened PDFs faster than Acrobat Reader did. Reader was
- getting bigger with every release, and eventually had a monstrous UI to load
- up every time I wanted to open a tiny PDF file. Second, Firefox had smooth
- scrolling for page-width documents. Reader was getting slower and laggier with
- each release, to the point where scrolling through a PDF was no longer buttery
- smooth but jittery and stuttery. It also seemed like Reader purposefully
- wouldn't slide the page when you used a mouse wheel. It would jump down a few
- lines at a time like it was simulating the down arrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- By my senior year I had switched from Windows to Linux full-time and it was
- then I found out about <a href="https://mupdf.com/">MuPDF</a> and from then on
- things were never the same. It's literally the best PDF reader I've ever used,
- and I tried out quite a few. There are desktop and mobile apps. It opens
- almost instantly. It lets you easily resize the page with excellent keyboard
- shortcuts. There are no giant menu bars on either side of the page to squish
- the document down to an unreadable size. Having a dozen of them open at once
- doesn't bog down my PC. It's also available for all of the relevant operating
- systems I've used (Windows, Mac OS, Linux, FreeBSD)! Oh and password-protected
- PDFs are supported as well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- It's a fantastic piece of software And the best part is it comes with a
- variety of tools to edit and manipulate PDFs as well. If the folks I went to
- school with thought you needed the free Acrobat Reader to view a PDF, they
- sure as heck thought you needed to buy Acrobat Pro to edit one. Some of them
- refused to pay for it and used a variety of online services to upload, split
- or merge, and download PDFs. I honestly for the life of me can't understand
- why. MuPDF comes with <code>mutool</code>, which does all of the things I
- would ever need to do with a PDF. It can attempt to convert a PDF to other
- formats, like HTML. It can split and combine documents. It can even create
- them from scratch and sign them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- It's also free and open source. Can you imagine that? PDF viewing and editing
- being free and open source? It's AGPL (in addition to being commercially)
- licensed by the creators. The only slight drawback is the desktop version
- apparently does not yet let you fill out forms. Not sure why but this isn't
- something I use very frequently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- It's not the hottest piece of tech out there, but it just plain works and
- works really well. Maybe the only reason more people I know don't use it is
- because Adobe is synonymous with the PDF format. It doesn't seem like that big
- of a deal, but I feel like Acrobat has always been a piece of software that
- has frustrated new or infrequent users in computing. And that's just not good.
- Maybe the barrier to using MuPDF is the lack of GUI and abundance of
- keybindings, but for me that's no sweat. I'd say to anyone to just try it out
- and see if they like it. It is free, after all.
-</p>