Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | reimuwu's commentslogin

I've tried picking up CSS several times but always revert to plain text or some simple rectangles. I just don't have the patience for mastering web design. Fortunately, AI tools are now capable enough to handle the heavy lifting, allowing those of us who hate CSS to actually ship something that looks professional. :)


This is the reality for me too. Something about css just doesn't click. The surface area of the api, how often it changes, the lack of suggestions and guardrails. It's just so different feeling than regular programming. Thank God for AI, I don't have to burn 50% of my time on battling css and can focus on shipping things.


> I wanted to vibe code from bed.

In this case, I think using Termux + SSH would be more convenient and compatible with all devices running sshd.


Yes but that's boring. Look at this it has cool ASCII and a QR. At this point no typing, just vibe-voice ask to build the thing and fix the error. Then we can have some tea, earl grey, hot.


I don't know if "more convenient" would be the words I would use. Setup on this project is very easy, it has very straightforward instructions. Meanwhile, I did a quick 5 minute pressure test of what you suggested and found myself with more questions than answers. I am not saying one way is better than the other, I am just thinking that for those that don't breathe SSH/VPN/Wireguard/Terminal Emulators/etc.. this project is actually far easier to understand.

Also, funny enough on compatibility, but "Termux" is not on iOS, so it fails that basic check. But there's alternatives, of course. Just an observation.


Also https://github.com/chriswritescode-dev/opencode-manager is getting there with a proper interface.


Would you consider vendoring dependencies? It would be helpful for offline builds, especially when writing packaging scripts :D


An important benefit of RSS is that it isn’t influenced by recommendation algorithms. It won’t keep pushing content from a single domain; instead, you can read articles from a wide range of fields. What the article describes feels more like a return to the traditional, linear information-flow model.


when I try to open arch/x86/kernel/entry_64.S. it just says: Failed to load file Failed to fetch file: File: arch/x86/kernel/entry_64.S

maybe its a bug?


The path should be arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: