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tl;dr I’ve extended James Friend’s in-browser Basilisk II port to create a full-featured classic 68K Mac in your browser. You can see it in action at system7.app or macos8.app. For a taste, see also this screencast: Backstory It’s a golden age of emulation. Between increasing CPU power, WebAssembly, and retrocomputing being so popular The New York Times is covering it, it’s never been easier to re
tl;dr: react-closure-compiler is a project that contains a custom Closure Compiler pass that understands React concepts like components, elements and mixins. It allows you to get type-aware checks within your components and compile React itself alongside your code with full minification. Late last year, Quip started a gradual migration to React for our web UI (incidentally the chat features that w
When XMPP support in Google App Engine was announced, it occurred to me that it would be pretty easy to use it to do a PubSubHubbub-to-XMPP bridge. Other things came up, but I was reminded again of the possibility when a "Oh, you didn't you see my Reader share?" conversation happened in a Partychat room. A bit of searching turned up someone else with the same idea, except it wasn't quite as user-f
I'm playing around with Twitter's streaming API for a (personal) project. tweetstream is a simple wrapper for it that seemed handy. Unfortunately it has a known issue that the HTTP library that it uses (urllib2) uses buffering in the file object that it creates, which means that responses for low volume streams (e.g. when using the follow method) are not delivered immediately. The culprit appears
During the Twitter DDoS attacks, there was a thread on the Twitter API group about using PubSubHubbub to get low latency notifications from Twitter. This would be an alternative to the streaming API that Twitter already has. The response from a Twitter engineer wasn't all that positive, and it is indeed correct that the streaming API already exists and seems to satisfy most developers' needs. Howe
As those of you on the new version of Gmail might have noticed, nearly all Greasemonkey scripts that used to work on the old version no longer do. Even though it looks pretty similar, the new Gmail is entirely different from a JavaScript, HTML and CSS perspective, so this isn't surprising. Some of the scripts are no longer necessary. For example, saved searches aren't really needed, since searches
There have been some reports that my Gmail Macros Greasemonkey script no longer works. I started to look into fixing this, and figured that while I was at it, I should incorporate the improvements that others have made to the script back into the original one. Both posts about it have a growing number of comments, including patched versions with various tweaks. Additionally, there is a Google Grou
Gmail has a seemingly simple but actually powerful filtering system. The "Has the words" input field can be used for arbitrary queries. However, the one line input is very cramped when trying to filter multiple mailing lists at once. A textarea would be more appropriate. Initially, this seemed like a job for Greasemonkey. However, since the filter input form is created dynamically, it's hard to de
Update on 12/18/2010: I've updated the tool to handle the V2 Delicious API. I've written a simple script/site that lets you import your del.icio.us bookmarks into Google's bookmarks feature (which doesn't seem to have a product name - oh, right): http://persistent.info/delicious2google/ Technical Details For a while now, Kushal* had been wanting a way to import his del.icio.us bookmarks into Googl
The new version of Reader has been out there long enough (and is now stable enough) that I have some time to catch my breath and make this post (my post-launch post last year came only a couple of days after the big announcement). I've jotted down some of my thoughts from the past few weeks, continuity will not be high. There were some hints that something big was coming. Chris's Twitter updates w
A few months ago, Jasper de Vries made a Greasemonkey script that places an unobtrusive feed icon in the upper-right portion of the screen, allowing two-click subscription to feeds that are encountered. Then, today I saw Pete's Greasemonkey scripts wish-list, which included on it a "You’re Already Subscribed To This" script. I figured it would be pretty easy to take Jasper's script and modify it t
As some commenters had noticed, Gmail changed the DOM node ID it uses for the action menu, which broke my Gmail Macros Greasemonkey script (since that's how it dispatches commands to the Gmail UI). I have now updated the script to work with both new and old IDs. Additionally, based on my experience developing the Google Reader labels selector, I've gotten rid of a harmless exception that would sho
I was a happy user of the Dark Sky weather app for many years. Even more than the localized and timely notifications (I live in a place with predictable weather) I appreciated its Apple Watch complications. I specifically used the three-line textual summary shown in the middle of the Modular face. My preferred Apple Watch face, circa 2022 Apple acquired Dark Sky in 2020, incorporated many of its f
Update on 1/23/2006: The label colors script exposed a XSS vulnerability. It has now been updated to remove this hole - all users are encouraged to install the latest version of the script. After many delays, I've finally gotten around to updating my Greasemonkey scripts so that they run under Firefox 1.5 and Greasemonkey 0.6.4. In fact, these scripts will most likely not work in older versions, a
Update on 12/23/2005: The script has been updated to be compatible with Firefox 1.5. See this entry for more information. Update on 8/28/2005: A bug that prevented the bubble from working correctly once a a conversation had been archived or trashed has been fixed. Please reinstall the script to use this updated version. Short Version Want preview bubbles for conversations in Gmail, as shown in the
Update on 12/23/2005: The script has been updated to be compatible with Firefox 1.5. See this entry for more information. Persistent searches (a.k.a. smart folders or saved searches) seem to be the feature du jour of email clients. Thunderbird has them, Evolution has them, and Mail.app soon will. On the other hand, Gmail is the web mail app to use. While one doesn't normally think of web apps as h
Want to easily post things you read in Bloglines to del.icio.us? Follow these steps: If you haven't already, install the excellent greasemonkey Firefox extension. Open up this user script (in Firefox). From the "Tools" menu, select "Install User Script.." and confirm all of the various prompts Go to your Bloglines account. Observe that all "Clip/Blog this" links at the bottom of each entry have be
Short Version Install the URLid Mozilla/Firefox extension. Download this CSS file. Locate your profile folder and the chrome folder within that. Copy the downloaded CSS file to the chrome folder and rename it to userContent.css (if you already have such a file, you will have to merge the two). Restart Firefox. Visit Gmail. Gmail meets The CSS Zen Garden One advantage of getting on the CSS/XHTML ba
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