I built these sci fi user interfaces using ClojureScript, React, and SVG:
Tap or click to interact with them.
I built these sci fi user interfaces using ClojureScript, React, and SVG:
Tap or click to interact with them.
My wife and I needed a collaborative shopping list that we could update from our phones. There are proprietary solutions to this but after some research I was surprised to discover that there is no Free Software application that meets the following criteria:
Of course I built one with ClojureScript.

We've been using this "in production" for 3 months and so far it fills our need without issue.
The realtime updating is accomplished via long-polling. Primarily I used this instead of websockets because when it comes to browsers, older tech is more robust to different operating environments than newer tech.
I resorted to using PHP for a very lightweight server backend because it has the property that basically anybody with web hosting is able to upload a PHP script and I think it's good to give software as egalitarian a deployment surface as possible. Luckily it is only 150 lines of not-too-painful PHP.
Couple of weekends ago Jessee and Chris came over and we made this free-standing tree-house-like platform thing for Scout and Orson out of some wooden palettes I'd collected during the preceding week.
When I say "we made" of course I mean they made it and wisely only let me touch one or two power tools during the course of construction.
I am playing algorithmic rave music at Rhetoric in Western Australia.

"An astronaut stranded on an alien planet, with only a few minutes left to live."
Orchids to Dusk had a powerful effect on me.
I dreamed about the game the night after playing it.
The creative power of code is the microwave background radiation of my subconscious and this game made me notice it again in a visceral way.
Inspirational.