logoalt Hacker News

farfatchedlast Sunday at 4:06 PM4 repliesview on HN

A big loss for the Emacs community! emacs-aio is great!

I see the author is spring cleaning:

> I've turned over a new leaf (no more Openbox, Tridactyl, Xorg, xterm), and so some of these things I no longer use. On Linux I now use KDE on Wayland with a minimally-configured browser. I miss the power user features, but I do not miss the friction and constant maintenance.

https://github.com/skeeto/dotfiles/commit/df275005769b654618...

> I am no longer using Mutt nor running my own mail server. In general less terminal stuff for me.

https://github.com/skeeto/dotfiles/commit/e331e367c75f66aaa9...

LLMs have inspired a similar change in me: with a big change in how I work, I feel I can and should be more flexible with adopting new tech, which involving freeing myself of previous choices.


Replies

iLemminglast Sunday at 9:41 PM

> LLMs have inspired a similar change in me

FWIW, the age of LLMs made me build a deeper, more intimate relationship with Emacs, because it's a Lisp REPL loop with a built-in editor, not the other way around. When you give an LLM a closed loop system where it can evaluate code in a live REPL and observe the results, it stops guessing and starts reasoning empirically.

LLM that I run inside Emacs can fully control the active Emacs instance. I can make it change virtually any aspect of it. To load-test things, I even made it play Tetris in Emacs. And not just simply run it, but to actually play it without losing. It was insane.

Also, Emacs is all about plain text - you can easily extract text from anything - from the browser, terminal, CLI apps, Slack, Jira, etc., and you can do that on your own terms - context can appear in a buffer, in your clipboard, become a file or series of API requests. That is really hard to beat.

show 8 replies
bovine3domlast Sunday at 8:41 PM

I wonder what friction/maintenance he found with Tridactyl

For me the friction always comes when I try to use the internet without it

show 1 reply
squigztoday at 5:30 PM

Does anyone else not understand what people mean when they refer to the "friction" supposedly inherent to these power user tools? Almost none of the configs/scripts/etc I use for my heavily-customized and terminal-heavy setup get changed for years at a time.

show 3 replies
SuperNinKenDotoday at 5:10 PM

[flagged]

show 4 replies