Testing out the new post feature

Vivamus id mollis quam. Morbi ac commodo nulla. In condimentum orci id nisl volutpat bibendum. Quisque commodo hendrerit lorem quis egestas. Maecenas quis tortor arcu. Vivamus rutrum nunc non neque consectetur quis placerat neque lobortis. Nam vestibulum, arcu sodales feugiat consectetur, nisl orci bibendum elit, eu euismod magna sapien ut nibh. Donec semper quam scelerisque tortor dictum gravida. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Nam pulvinar, odio sed rhoncus suscipit, sem diam ultrices mauris, eu consequat purus metus eu velit. Proin metus odio, aliquam eget molestie nec, gravida ut sapien. Phasellus quis est sed turpis sollicitudin venenatis sed eu odio. Praesent eget neque eu eros interdum malesuada non vel leo. Sed fringilla.

Tuna fish and noodles is a delicious casserole.

Nam pulvinar, odio sed rhoncus suscipit, sem diam ultrices mauris, eu consequat purus metus eu velit. Proin metus odio, aliquam eget molestie nec, gravida ut sapien. Phasellus quis est sed turpis sollicitudin venenatis sed eu odio. Praesent eget neque eu eros interdum malesuada non vel leo. Sed fringilla porta ligula egestas tincidunt. Nullam risus magna, ornare vitae varius eget.

Let’s try another header lever.

Header 2

-Emphasis-

Strong

def hello(fish)
  puts fish + "Hi there!"
end
# this is very important
class Chicken
  def hello2
    puts "Hi there!"
  end
end

and some clojure

(map #(+ 1 %) (range 1 100))
(println "Hello")

Fixing Desktop Organization

I hate bookmarks.

  • They are tied to a single browser
  • They are tied to a machine
  • They store limited information

Del.icio.us solves some of those problems. It’s not a perfect match, though. I do not need the social features, and I’d like to collect more data about my bookmarks.

Smucket is my solution.

It’s written in clojure (it’s my first clojure program, be gentle.) Currently, it watches my desktop for new files and runs a callback specified by filetype. It is capable of handling more than just webloc files, but when it sees a webloc file it runs a variant of the readability algorithm (inspired by this implementation. The program stores filename, modification date, page title, readability content and a map of words to frequencies.

I store page word frequencies because I’m looking at doing analysis of my bookmarks in order to find connections. This code isn’t implemented yet. I’m thinking about how to do it right now.

Issues should be reported on the github page. Send me pull requests if you have changes. There are no tests yet. I’m not familiar with the testing environment in clojure yet, and I wanted to get something functional.

Hello!

Hello