I just ssh'd into the zaibatsu for the first time.
What follows is just me thinking out loud, but I guess
that's all a phlog ever is in the end.
I spent most of my first cup of coffee skulking through old
posts on the bbs. In the process, I became a little more
familiar with what you're all trying to do, and I like it,
especially the effort to rsync the bbs between the zaibatsu
and the republic, and to link other features (mail, etc.)
One thing that was confusing was that I thought I was using
gboard to read the bbs, but then I tried telem, which is
supposed to be lighter on resources, and the experience
seemed identical. So I'm not sure if I was on telem in the
first place... (perhaps it's the default bbs client now?).
In one of the posts, someone mentioned that the bbs
replicates the functions of nntp, and I think that is true
to a great extent. Ideally, it would be cool if I could read
the bbs entries using slrn. I suspect someone just thought:
"write that program yourself [expletive, expletive]."
I also like the idea of creating a uniform way to replicate
the micro-pubnix easily, so that new servers could be set up
as the userbase grows, and further
decentralization/federation could take place.
On a completely unrelated note, up until this point, I've
been composing my phlog entries using bluefish editor so
that I could set the line lengths (to 60 characters, for
readability). But I wanted to be able to compose them in a
terminal-based editor.
Last night I tried vim. I still hate it. I started out on a
university mainframe account, where PINE was the default
mail client. As a result I've always been a pico/nano user.
So this morning I looked into nano commands and it turns out
that you can set the line length as follows, when you're
initiating the program:
nano -r 60
Substitute whatever line length you want. Ctrl-J if you need
to rejustify a paragraph after editing it.
I'm going to alias that command as edgopher or something
like that. I don't want the line length as a default,
because I use nano for scripts, config files, etc.
Anyways, time to get ready for work. I have an exam. On a
Saturday. Expletive, expletive.