One Paragraph of project description goes here
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
Slack doesn't provide an easy way to extract custom emoji from a team. (Especially teams with thousands of custom emoji) This Gist walks you through a relatively simple approach to get your emoji out.
If you're an admin of your own team, you can get the list of emoji directly using this API: https://api.slack.com/methods/emoji.list. Once you have it, skip to Step 3
HOWEVER! This gist is intended for people who don't have admin access, nor access tokens for using that list.
Follow along...
#!/bin/bash | |
# Generate a `:something-intensifies:` Slack emoji, given a reasonable image | |
# input. I recommend grabbing an emoji from https://emojipedia.org/ | |
set -euo pipefail | |
# Number of frames of shaking | |
count=10 | |
# Max pixels to move while shaking |
A Windows Terminal Theme based on @sailorhg's Fairy Floss theme
N.B. This uses Powershell as my shell but you can change this by changing the commandline
value in the profile
below!
A list of books, essays, papers, blog posts, tweets, etc. on tech and ethics that I have either read and found useful or plan to read because I think they might be useful. I’m not especially interested in ethics that doesn’t take power or structure into account, so most of the standard texts one would read in a course on ethics aren’t represented on my list.
Not strictly about either ethics or tech, but Claire Dederer’s What Do We Do With the Art of Monstrous Men? verbalizes something that is wound up in how I think about ethics, and what I hear when people talk about ethics:
This, I think, is what happens to so many of us when we consider the work of the monster geniuses—we tell ourselves we’re having ethical thoughts when really what we’re having is moral feelings.
Dr. Robin James recommends Charles Mills’ [Ideal Theory as I