I made a website to be the caniuse for terminals, and it also includes some history/fundamentals stuff. I thought it was useful background if you want to dive into the capabilities of modern terminal and trying to make sense of the alphabet soup that is SGR, OSC, ANSI, etc:
We don’t need aggregators like HN pitching AI-authored content, no matter how pedagogically sound. We can direct our own AIs to generate our own AI-authored content.
> This is a clean separation, and clean separations are worth noticing. They tend to be load-bearing.
oh hi Claude
I made a website to be the caniuse for terminals, and it also includes some history/fundamentals stuff. I thought it was useful background if you want to dive into the capabilities of modern terminal and trying to make sense of the alphabet soup that is SGR, OSC, ANSI, etc:
Anyone else get hit by the (now seemingly obvious) kernel --> shell naming while reading this?
> Three names, one thing. That’s why they blur together.
Stopped reading here. This is an AI article.
Just to play devil's advocate: why? There's nothing a priori that suggests AI-written content is less pedagogically sound than human written content?
We don’t need aggregators like HN pitching AI-authored content, no matter how pedagogically sound. We can direct our own AIs to generate our own AI-authored content.
Because the style is irritating, and as usual: if the author can't be bothered to write it, I can't be bothered to read it.
Thanks
> In POSIX.1-2024, the master side is called “manager” and the slave side is called “subsidiary.”
Ah, who can forget the manager-subsidiary combo.