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5 votes
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Interactive Double Pendulum Playground
4 votes -
The future of PrivacyTools
17 votes -
mkws - A simple static site generator
12 votes -
Hampster Economics - Pondering how a meme from a quarter-century ago might have gone over in today’s much-more-mature creator economy
3 votes -
I gave digital animation a shot
11 votes -
Four things I liked in Q3
1 vote -
Tildes Game Review Journal - October 2021
Thanks to all who posted to or read last month's trial run of this topic. Let's try another month! This thread is for when you're done with a game and you want to give your finalized overview of...
Thanks to all who posted to or read last month's trial run of this topic. Let's try another month!
This thread is for when you're done with a game and you want to give your finalized overview of it. Did you enjoy it? What did it do well? What were some of its frustrations? Would you recommend it to others? That sort of thing.
For ease of readability, please bold the title for the game you're reviewing.
Also, please mark all spoilers as well using the following formatting:
<details> <summary>Spoilers</summary> Spoiler text goes here. </details>
5 votes -
Analytic Number Theory book club ending today
3 votes -
Rolling with the Holmies
1 vote -
Tildes Game Review Journal - September 2021
I really enjoy reading through the weekly gaming threads where people talk about what they're currently playing. Those often give really interesting in-the-moment commentary, and I was thinking it...
I really enjoy reading through the weekly gaming threads where people talk about what they're currently playing. Those often give really interesting in-the-moment commentary, and I was thinking it might be nice to have a spot for more formalized "I'm finished with a game" thoughts and reflections.
This thread is for when you're done with a game and you want to give your finalized overview of it. Did you enjoy it? What did it do well? What were some of its frustrations? Would you recommend it to others? That sort of thing.
For ease of readability, please bold the title for the game you're reviewing.
If this is something the community likes, I'm thinking it could be a recurring monthly thing. Consider this month's post a trial run to see whether this is a concept worth continuing.
22 votes -
Rocket: A Web Framework for Rust
9 votes -
Our next trip to integer partitions
2 votes -
Presenting: Space Huggers - A run and gun roguelike in 13KB of JavaScript
18 votes -
Our trip to the prime number theorem
9 votes -
What's the point of a company? Philip Morris is attempting to purchase a respiratory illness treatment company, let's talk about it.
10 votes -
Linux Privilege Escalation - Three Easy Ways to Get a Root Shell
9 votes -
Completed skirt project!
40 votes -
Primality test using regex
9 votes -
Cows using virtual reality and the future of work
5 votes -
Its still rough, but I made a really busy tildes theme
I decided to rewrite this from scratch. You can try it out if you're game. album I wiped out my profile in Chrome the other day and forgot to back up stylus and some other settings for a few...
I decided to rewrite this from scratch. You can try it out if you're game.
I wiped out my profile in Chrome the other day and forgot to back up stylus and some other settings for a few extensions. I found an old post where I listed part of a theme I'd started working on, but had since abandoned.
I couldn't find a copy of the ol' Tiltweaks stylus theme, either, so I decided to bring back that old, unfinished gem to get my theme back to roughly where I had it before... then I added a bunch of other crap in.
Anyway, here's the link to a busy screencap.
The two column layout isn't for everybody, but in the brief time I've spent with it, I'm starting to like it.
Just thought I'd share. I'm about 99.6% certain everybody will see it and say, 'gross' :)
15 votes -
PixelCraft: A pixel art editor
6 votes -
Continuous Partial Intention, a decade story
13 votes -
Hashing Phone Numbers For 2-Factor Authentication
7 votes -
All Futurama opening quotes
23 votes -
The last time I got into an internet argument
16 votes -
I'm crafting some more!
I mentioned a small age ago that I'm teaching myself to make a skirt. I finally have progress I'm ready to share! The buttons are just sitting on there, and it needs a waistband, but it's nearly...
I mentioned a small age ago that I'm teaching myself to make a skirt. I finally have progress I'm ready to share! The buttons are just sitting on there, and it needs a waistband, but it's nearly ready!
14 votes -
KeenWrite 2.2.0: Curl straight quotes upon export
4 votes -
Using John the Ripper To Crack Password Hashes
3 votes -
Oildrop - A self-auditable userscript manager
13 votes -
The bullshit economy: Amazon Sidewalk
7 votes -
Built a satirical social network (ShlinkedIn)—would love to pick y'alls brains about social media and this project!
39 votes -
Project: Miniature longsword
Over the last couple of years my sister has been getting into HEMA (Historical European Martial Arts) and especially the longsword. She recently had a significant birthday so I thought I'd make...
Over the last couple of years my sister has been getting into HEMA (Historical European Martial Arts) and especially the longsword. She recently had a significant birthday so I thought I'd make her a small, but realistic and functional, longsword. It went pretty well, if I do say so myself. I did not, however, take as many photos as I would have liked, but I was doing this thing in very short bursts so I only had a few minutes here or there to get this done.
To start, I read a bit about longsword proportions, looked at some pictures and sketched a couple of possible designs, before finalising a 1:1 scale drawing to work from. I bought some O1 tool steel (carbon steel so it can be hardened and sharpened properly) and started to cut. Almost immediately I made a mistake, I cut the steel 25% too long. But that was OK, I just went with it.
I roughly shaped the metal and got it in the forge to heat-treat. Plunged into oil then slammed hard into my newly-built plate quench (aside: the plate quench is two hefty slabs of aluminium, designed to suck heat out of the steel fast, while holding it flat to prevent warping). The plates worked, the metal came out dead flat and not at all warped, which was good because there was very little space to grind out any distortions. I heart plate quenching.
Next, cutting up some brass to make the crossguard. Cutting a 1.5x3mm slot in that was incredibly frustrating. I broke all four of my remaining 1mm drill bits, eventually had to resort to very fine diamond burrs and going extremely slowly. Luckily there is a bit of overlap from the blade so the slightly messy slot is covered up a bit. Similarly for the pommel, which was cut from brass rod and shaped on my lathe before I totally botched cutting a hole for the tang. If anything I made more of mess of the pommel, during the final fit up I just filled it with glue and wedged it in the right place.
Inbetween making an awful - albeit recoverable/hideable - mess of the sword hardware I also finished up shaping and finishing the blade itself. This is where I don't have a lot of photos, but I ground a bevel onto the blade and wondered about cutting a fuller (groove down the centre of the blade) before realising that I absolutely did not have the tools to do that and would make a total mess of it. I also thought about sharpening it to scary sharp but given my sister has two reasonably small children I left it fairly blunt. It'll make a good letter opener but not much more. If she wants it sharp I can always put a serious edge on it another time.
Final pre-glue fit up, as you can see it matches the design drawing pretty well, apart from being to a slightly different scale.
I had considered making a wooden handle, as is traditional, but I was running short on time and I had plenty of leather so instead I did two layers of wrapping. This is the base layer (I do not remember why I have 1mm orange leather but I do) wrapped and clamped so the glue can dry. Another layer went on top of that and I ran a final polishing disc over everything, put a very light coat of metal lacquer over the metal to keep it shiny and that was it. Sword done.
I cut a piece of round bar steel, cut and forged it to shape as a support, treated the hot metal with beeswax (gives a lovely black finish which stops rust and looks nice). I set this in some flame-finished oak and gave that a coat of tung oil. Once the various finishes and glues had dried it was good to go.
The final product, dangling point, handle detail, view from above and in my hand for scale
I think this is one of the best things I've ever made. I hope my sister likes it. I have some metal left so I might try making another - there's a few things I'd do differently.
14 votes -
Flathub, runtimes and stats
4 votes -
Robinhood: We're all investors, alone
5 votes -
1099s and Tenderness: Papa Health
2 votes -
KeenWrite 2.0
12 votes -
ArchLabs 2021.05.02 Release
7 votes -
Another prog house mix
6 votes -
Getting kinky for the sake of data
4 votes -
I made a web based microKORG patch editor
5 votes -
A short mix of progressive house
11 votes -
What is the bullshit economy?
7 votes -
TeXMe Demo: Self-rendering Markdown + MathJax documents
6 votes -
Misinformation about Permissions Policy and FLoC
8 votes -
Introduction to SQL Injection - SQLi for Beginners
10 votes -
Trio | Social video optimized for threes
10 votes -
Murder coffee
3 votes -
The Global Transgender Resources Registry
10 votes -
Why use old computers and operating systems?
19 votes