![]() Subscribe to the site via the feed, or build something cool with the API. Unless otherwise noted, everything is available via the Attribution-Share Alike licence. Uses This is supported by ZSA, makers of the Moonlander, ErgoDox EZ and Planck EZ keyboards. I think I would give up my mouse for that. Thought-controlled software and a wireless internet connection in my brain, integrated right into my field of vision. But only the Inbox, and mainly for their superb "Quick Entry" feature. The very first piece of non-Apple software I bought for OS X was LaunchBar back in 2005 and I haven't stopped using it since.įor basic image manipulation I use Acorn and for basic "todo" stuff I use Things. ![]() Not because I'm vain (though there is that), but because I proudly subscribe to Stunners of the Month and like to photograph each new pair I receive. My files gets backed up to S3 using Arq, my computer screen doesn't dim unless I want it to thanks to Caffeine, and I take pictures of myself all the time with Photo Booth. I've even written a few plugins ("modes") for it: textmate.el and coffee-mode.įor version control I use git on the command line and through magit, which is perhaps the greatest of all Emacs modes. Fantastic app that changed the way I work with other people. I'm also in love with pretty much anything Tapbots does - Pastebot and Calcbot especially.Īs for work, we spend all day in Campfire by way of Propane. Kindle, Dropbox, and Simplenote bring me great joy. Right now I'm obsessed with software that transparently syncs between my devices. It's water resistant, which is important because I lose every umbrella I touch. I carry my stuff in a laptop bag by Reiter8. I use it atop a Ratpadz mouse pad I got for free while working at GameStop. Kim Cuartero gave it to me back when we both worked at GameSpot. Every other mouse feels like I'm trying to pull the OS's cursor dingus through a pool of mud. I've been using the default bindings for many many years without any issue. It fits my hand perfectly, has buttons exactly where I want them (mapped to whatever I want with USB Overdrive), and the precision is outrageous. default bindings, org, magit, ox-hugo At least for me, 'default emacs bindings cause RSI' is a myth. I've used the same one for five years and it still feels futuristic. I also have a Logitech MX518 mouse and it's amazing. The Air is great because I lug it everywhere and hardly notice it. What hardware do you use?īoring Apple stuff, mostly: MacBook Air, iPad, iPhone 4. I write code, answer email, listen to metal, and help make GitHub more awesome. The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.I'm Chris Wanstrath. Mac OS seems to use Keychain to store certificates, but somehow gnutls was not finding them. I’m only mentioning this in this list in case it is of help to anyone else encountering this problem or, what is more likely, that someone can tell me whether I’m missing something obvious. I did find /etc/ssl/cert.pem instead and added that to gnutls-trustfiles and things now seem to work. Only that in my system at least there were no certificates in any of these places. ("/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt" "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt" "/etc/ssl/ca-bundle.pem" "/usr/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt" "/usr/local/share/certs/ca-root-nss.crt”) I looked through the gnutls variables and found gnutls-trustfiles whose original value was After some trial and error I noticed that the error was that gnutls-cli was being called with "gnutls-cli -x509cafile nil -p 443 ” which was not working due to the fact that it was not finding any certificates. Today for the first time ever I tried to install a package (magit) via the emacs package installer, i.e., via M-x package-refresh-contents, M-x package-install,…Īnd at first it failed with an error from gnutls-cli that the connection had failed.
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