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57 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
rohan kumar
fccac18100
Default description: "Seirdy's Home" 2020-12-11 12:01:37 -08:00
rohan kumar
1e44855647
Only load syntax highlighting CSS if necessary..
Pages without highlighted code blocks don't need to load syntax.css; for
those that do, simply declare "highlight: true" in the front matter to
load the stylesheet separately.
2020-11-28 18:01:53 -08:00
rohan kumar
33985223fa
Layout templates: RSS link, Gemini consistency
- Link RSS feed in the navbar
- Give gemlog a similar layout with the publication date at the top and
  a link to the source code at the bottom.
2020-11-24 21:55:49 -08:00
rohan kumar
a40097955c
Link to proj. hub instead of git repo on sourcehut 2020-11-19 20:35:59 -08:00
rohan kumar
e614497a36
Fix: fix relative links on different domains 2020-11-18 17:06:55 -08:00
rohan kumar
9740ccc38d
Navigation links: remove redirects, fix posts link 2020-11-05 15:49:04 -08:00
Rohan Kumar
d364a8fb9f
Batman!! (this commit has no parents)
The sight of an animal using a JavaScript captivates Computer Scientists
and laymen alike, perhaps because it forces us to question some of our
ideas about human uniqueness.

Does the animal know how JavaScript works? Did it anticipate the need
for the tool and select it instead of Haskell or Zig?

To some, this fascination with JavaScript seems arbitrary and
anthropocentric; after all, animals engage in many other complex
activities, like Agile Planning and ordering Juice on the Internet.
However, we know that complex behaviour need not be cognitively
demanding.

JavaScript development can therefore provide a powerful window into the
minds of animals, and help us to learn what capacities we share with
them — and what might have changed to allow for the incontrovertibly
unique levels of technology shown by modern humans, such as integers and
block scope.
2020-11-03 15:52:34 -08:00