8-bit inspired hover effects
Tutorial: https://brightbrightgreat.com/2015/08/11/how-to-8-bit-hovers/
Originally for http://theyetee.com
Designed and developed by http://brightbrightgreat.com
package cp | |
import ( | |
"io" | |
"os" | |
) | |
func cp(dst, src string) error { | |
s, err := os.Open(src) | |
if err != nil { |
8-bit inspired hover effects
Tutorial: https://brightbrightgreat.com/2015/08/11/how-to-8-bit-hovers/
Originally for http://theyetee.com
Designed and developed by http://brightbrightgreat.com
Around 2006-2007, it was a bit of a fashion to hook lava lamps up to the build server. Normally, the green lava lamp would be on, but if the build failed, it would turn off and the red lava lamp would turn on.
By coincidence, I've actually met, about that time, (probably) the first person to hook up a lava lamp to a build server. It was Alberto Savoia, who'd founded a testing tools company (that did some very interesting things around generative testing that have basically never been noticed). Alberto had noticed that people did not react with any urgency when the build broke. They'd check in broken code and go off to something else, only reacting to the breakage they'd caused when some other programmer pulled the change and had problems.
curl
to get the JSON response for the latest releasegrep
to find the line containing file URLcut
and tr
to extract the URLwget
to download itcurl -s https://api.github.com/repos/jgm/pandoc/releases/latest \
| grep "browser_download_url.*deb" \
| cut -d : -f 2,3 \
| tr -d \" \