I’m sure emacs is great but I learned about vim and neovim first so it’s kind of a done deal already, not a lot of us Linux users are open source enthusiasts with so much time that we can noodle in all different flavors of text editors.
vim works great for me shrug, if emacs works great for you then awesome
do folks do pc builds inside of old CRT cases? that seems like a niche that should exist.
Remember when monitors were so fat you could hide a whole computer inside one?
Apple’s still doing it.
my computer lives inside my keyboard, next to the keyboard’s computer
It’s a text editor you customise by programming it. Why do you think that’s appealing?
I think you missed the joke.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EMacThis stupid antique computer is the reason my iOS keyboard autocorrects “emacs” to “eMacs”
there’s something so funny about them both being apple products, but the offending party getting the disrespect of “this stupid antique computer”
I think we found the guy! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urcL86UpqZc
Running emacs on emacs. Inception!
source: @hfaust@shitposter.world
GNU intensifies
This guy emacs
Not a mac guy but this was my favorite era.
Because the mouse is useless with only one button so you have to use the keyboard.
Ctrl + click!
that won’t help on an eMac, you need ⌘+click.
I think it’s ctrl click for right click. Command click is for selecting multiple files.
I don’t recall the eMac keyboard having a CTRL key.
I loved when it was redesigned for lcd’s. move the screen anywhere you want.
The eMac was one of the best of the era IMO
I’ve been meaning to buy one of those forever, we had them in elementary school and they were fun
It was my first Mac and first computer that was just mine.
Boy I pushed that thing to the limits. Ended up frying the video card. While I loved it, it was just so so weak.
I remember my school had no idea how you should set up computers before letting first graders use them so we were all constantly dragging all the applications into the trash can to hear the fun noise and see the little puff of dust.
They also all had a copy of Type to Learn Jr installed, which we were strictly forbidden from opening, and every time we were using the computers multiple people would get in trouble for playing it. A few years ago I got a couple of cheap iBook G3 laptops and the first thing I did was install Type to Learn Jr and finally play it all the way through
Mine had a bunch of iMac g3s, eMacs came toward grade 8.
Games weren’t explicitly forbidden, just needed to finish work first, new Cross Country Canada, math circus and Oregon trail were the games I recall the most of. There was this one game though I can’t recall the name of but the concept was interesting, you played as a time travelling velociraptor and had to save dinosaur eggs from extinction, was like a 3rd person shooter, I have no idea why that was on school computers
Edit: was Nanosaur
In the distant year of 4122, a dinosaur species, Nanosaurs, rule the Earth. Their civilization originated from a group of human scientists who experimented with genetic engineering. Their experimentation led them to resurrect the extinct dinosaur species; however, their victory was short-lived, as a disastrous plague brought the end of their civilization itself. The few dinosaurs resurrected were lent an unusual amount of intelligence from their human creators, leaving them to expand on their growing civilization. However, as the Nanosaurs were the only species on Earth, inbreeding was the only possible choice of reproduction. This method largely affected the intelligence of the various offspring, and slowly began to pose a threat to their once-intelligent society.
The Nanosaur government offers a quest that involves time traveling into the year 65 million BC, where the five eggs of ancient dinosaur species must be retrieved and placed in a time portal leading to the present year. Their high-ranking agent, a brown Deinonychus Nanosaur, is chosen to participate in this mission. On the day of her mission, she is teleported to the past via a time machine in a Nanosaur laboratory.
Was their goal to make it feel forbidden so the rebellious kids would ‘secretly’ learn typing?
Didn’t know that X runs inside Emacs, but it doesn’t surprise me.
Call it Twitter. X is a stupid name
Twitter
XWayland
Ex-Twitter
The correct response is: telnet towel.blinkenlights.nl