if i don’t work out and get up early, and get to talk to new people every day, i have a lot of trouble socializing. at the coffee shop she kept complimenting my supreme hoodie - "i’ve never seen one like it before", etc - but I had no idea how to respond. This used to be a pattern for me, but I broke out of it by getting up early and interacting with lots of poeple - something I haven’t done at all over break. I need to relearn these skills and always be so open to interacting with people face-to-face - these relationships with people online are just unhealthy otherwise.
i’m finally reaching my ui flow again with a couple of upgrades and running emacs as a daemon. we’re a lot faster now - maybe some linux kernel update? - but there is still so much work to do on the desktop interface.
every program i use commits this cardinal sin of nesting window managers. I love the ergonomics of something like Emacs - and I’ll continue to use it as a text editor - but using it to manage windows and the OS just isn’t practical. Anything that uses tabs or windows should use the same interface to manage them!
Concretely -
in short, i want to bring the emacs workflow to the window manager, and add expressive keyboard shortcuts, etc
my arrow keys are way too far away lol whats a better way of triggering them? a shortcut? pressing two keys at once? chording feels far more ergonomic than some key combination; it ‘flows’ better, it feels just like the staccato or rolling nature of typing, and it’s almost more natural in that way; the keyboard feels and sounds very similar when chording as it does when
how do we inject fun?
feed into a metaphor for the kitchen, or the lab, or the music studio, not the desktop; the desktop is where you do boring business things. i want to feel like i’m chefing up some fire every time i use my device, and i watn to assemble modular tools myself.
What about a box of toys? Legos? We could extend this into some node system for workflows with blocks for automations built into the OS. Look back at previous notes for this.
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