It didn't get much attention when I posted it earlier this week, but I made an SSH movie player:<p>ssh ansi.rya.nc<p>(currently shows Sneakers, complete with subtitles)
The SSH keystroke lag makes it un-enjoyable especially that you need to type to move around the interface. Otherwise, I like the concept. I'd rather have a terminal feed of random shit that I can filter than having to navigate around web pages.
This is AWESOME. Love the idea of totally navigating around the ad-noise that the modern html/css/js web has become. This is how I first experienced the internet and I still maintain that it is one of the sanest ways to do so.<p>How is adoption so far?
This is timely.<p>For my side project (pricetracker.wtf) i was hoping to build a terminal app that you can connect with telnet or ssh - and do navigate the app through a super simplified but interactive ux...<p>Found a few libraries that seems to help with this...
Curious how long it took to get it? Fun experiment. Missing readline support though :)<p>I was at first thinking I could use it from my commandline directly..
this is really cool but i would like to register more than one ssh key because i'm using hardware keys and if i physically loose the one key i wont be able to get in
I like the idea of having different options for content creation, but I don't understand why "micro-blogging" is still a thing. It originated in message length limitations of texting back when texting was a new thing. Why inject an outdated constraint into a new tool?