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Saunders' "Sticks" is one of my go-to flash fiction recommendations. https://www.unm.edu/~gmartin/535/Sticks.htm

I've been writing short stories all year and it's a great challenge. It's quite different from writing code. https://conorbarnes.com/stories


I have a folder of a dozen or so short stories that I like to write as a distraction when code gets too...rigid?

It's a wonderful hobby that takes very little effort and becomes it's own reward.

Never shared anything though.


Location: Halifax, Canada

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: TypeScript, React, React Native, Node, Go, Rust, CSS

Résumé/CV: https://conorbarnes.com/conor_barnes_resume.pdf

Email: conorbarnes93@gmail.com


https://conorbarnes.com/

It should be getting a dark theme face-lift in the next week though!


Hi HN! Pixel Sorter is a website for creating glitch art through pixel sorting. I built it over the last two weeks on request from my designer friend who noticed that there are paid apps for pixel sorting and scripts, but not a solid, free website for it.

It includes - Random, full image, and threshold sorting - Sorting by HSL and RGB values - Cardinal directions. - Regular and inverted masking.

You can get pretty cool effects with the default values, and you can get pretty precise effects through the use of inverted masking.

Caveat: It might panic if you try to glitch an image that's too large. All work is done client-side on a web worker. The pro is that Pixel Sorter will always be free and you retain your privacy. The con is that the app uses enough memory to upset a browser. Incorporating generator functions to ameliorate that is on my to-do list, and hopefully that'll be enough without learning WebAssembly.

Let me know what you think!

Blog version of this post, with images: www.conorbarnes.comm/blog/pixelsorter


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