As a general rule, the Emacs faith does not proselytise.<p>That being said, welcome to the GNU side, oh brethren! Your official Texinfo manuals and GNU Emacs reference cards are already in the electronic post. Elisp services begin at nine and conclude with the working day, although you are free (according to the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3, or at your option, any later version) to continue for as long as you wish.
Had me curious as to which dev domains are still available.<p>The domain search for ".dev" domains on Google is broken for me: <a href="https://domains.google/tld/dev/" rel="nofollow">https://domains.google/tld/dev/</a> I go there, enter a proposed domain, and click the search button.<p>It asks you to sign in, then just shows me a header with a blank page. Like this: <a href="https://imgur.com/a/7MgLQx1" rel="nofollow">https://imgur.com/a/7MgLQx1</a><p>Edit: Hmm. Access to XMLHttpRequest at '<a href="https://accounts.google.com/ServiceLogin?[long" rel="nofollow">https://accounts.google.com/ServiceLogin?[long</a> query cut out]' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
It's like rickrolling someone :D
Mandatory to mention, but I prefer Vim.<p>[edit]
emacs.dev seems to be available still, so it's not to late to make it redirect to the vim website!