============================================================================= Date: Nov. 25, 2019 Location: Buried in Paper and Reeds Mood: Magma Cooling, Flowing Slowly Music: Hiroshi Yoshimura - Wet Land ============================================================================= The semester is winding down. Classwork and projects are coming in more slowly, but are proving more difficult and robust than previous ones. I still haven't solidified any plans for next summer, but I'm in the process of ironing things out with one opportunity in the city, and another possible opportunity either here at home or somewhere in New Jersey. Work is heating up. The holiday season is here, and everyone in the area wants to get all their groceries at once. We ran out of many items today and customers were complaining about it all night. I understand their frustration. But there's something about being in the middle of that swirling confusion, being buffeted by it day in and day out, that makes it all seem so pointless. Why be mad about a frozen hunk of meat? I nearly got run over by some guy in a pickup truck just trying to make my way into the store today, but I wasn't complaining about that. I had previously mentioned a terminal-based RPG game I was working on in my free time. Well, as with all ill-conceived ideas, that went into the garbage pretty quick. Replacing it was a different TUI idea. I use Evernote to organize most of my writing, be it poetry or prose. However, the client I use, Tusk, is somewhat bloated. It tries to emulate as closely as possible the first-party browser application, but that leads to a huge chunk of my system resources being taken up. And most of it going to features that I never even use my Evernote account for. So, I decided to look for a less resource-intensive alternative. The only terminal clients I found for Evernote either sucked, or were no longer supported. So I said "Fuck it, I'll make my own." Thus, CurseNote was born. I'm now in the process of making my own terminal-based Evernote client. The design is somewhat inspired by the TUI client for Discord I discovered a little while ago, Cordless[1]. I've got most of the UI taken care of, as well as some basic note/notebook operations, but there is still a lot of work to be done regarding configuration, error handling, and much more. I've included a link to a screenshot of the app as it exists right now in the phlog directory of my gophersite (which is most likely where you're reading this now), so feel free to take a look and let me know what you think of it so far. Drop any feedback into my email: nynergy@sdf.org Thanks, - Ben [1] https://github.com/Bios-Marcel/cordless