5/23/2026 at 8:21:39 PM
This is an awesome setup. I like it, good job.That said, I do think there's a bit of irony to solving your "paying attention to writing" problem by setting up your OS from scratch, choosing to swap out the default networking stack, installing a novel flavor of your preferred text editor because you're "trying to get to know it a bit more," customizing your battery readouts, tweaking the login sequence, and then, after all that effort to make sure you'd have the perfect environment for uninterrupted writing sessions, installing tmux so that you'll be able to do multiple things at a time.
by CobrastanJorji
5/23/2026 at 8:53:37 PM
It it reminds me of a lot of friends who wanted to "start blogging" and their first step was writing a new static site system from scratch.by michaelbuckbee
5/24/2026 at 4:07:00 AM
Or friends who want to "make a game" and their first step is writing game engine from scratch.I wouldn't be surprised if programmers had, collectively, written more game engines than actual games.
by throw10920
5/24/2026 at 9:33:12 AM
> I wouldn't be surprised if programmers had, collectively, written more game engines than actual games.Tailored to web developers, there definitively are more half-finished frameworks sitting on people's disks than finished web applications, I'm sure my ratio is pretty close to 1/1 over the years.
by embedding-shape
5/24/2026 at 4:57:06 AM
Oh, that's exactly what I do. My rule is: one game, one engine. It's based on whatever the OS provides of course, or an abstraction layer like SDL, but everything above that is my own, tailored specifically to the game at hand.by bitwize
5/24/2026 at 2:10:47 PM
I'd much prefer people do this than pump out more poorly-running Unity or UE games.by opan
5/24/2026 at 7:04:15 AM
Or when I wanted to write a novel and went into world-building fantasy enciclopedia for two years... I didn't even pass the page 2 of the novel, lol. Now it's all forgotten.by debesyla
5/25/2026 at 7:51:13 AM
Reminds me of the old saying “everyone has a pen, but not everyone is a writer.”by prox
5/23/2026 at 9:31:41 PM
But how am I supposed to be productive writing blogposts unless I can copy my favorite Clojure templating library into Nix first, so I can have completely statically and reproducible blog posts building from markdown together with the nicest type of templating?by embedding-shape
5/23/2026 at 10:55:34 PM
If we're all being honest, I'd rather read the Clojure/Nix templating blogpost instead of the 10,000th "why human interaction is important" bearblog essay.by bigyabai
5/24/2026 at 7:40:11 AM
There is a false dichotomy here.by rglullis
5/24/2026 at 8:03:42 AM
"Clojure/Nix templating, or why human interaction is important" /jby volemo
5/24/2026 at 5:21:30 PM
I could certainly read both, but only one sounds interesting.by bigyabai
5/23/2026 at 10:33:10 PM
yeah, part of my current writing push was made more successful by two things:* I am not allowed to use a blogging system I wrote. (Really, I've written three or four at this point and need to stop, and there are plenty of existing systems that still align with my idiosyncratic constraints.)
* The blog must not have any meta content about blog tooling.
(I cheated a little on the latter by having an extra "site" blog for that - which lets me get the words out but doesn't "count" for the writing goal. A useful outlet, but it meant an extra month or so before "real writing" outnumbered meta writing :-)
by eichin
5/24/2026 at 12:46:17 AM
But then they have something to write about as their first post.by crimsontech
5/24/2026 at 8:58:03 AM
Reminds me of getting a new pen and notebook for Christmas and all I could think of to write was "this is my new pen"by klondike_klive
5/23/2026 at 9:27:18 PM
It's very convenient to have a first project all ready to blog about, fresh in your mind and everything:Dby yjftsjthsd-h
5/23/2026 at 9:17:26 PM
I think it is great to combine two personal projects into one!For me, I can't learn anything unless I actually have a purpose for it. So if I wanted to learn how to write a static site system, I would also need to think of a reason I need one!
by cortesoft
5/24/2026 at 2:18:36 AM
one of my goals is to work on the server platform that i am using for my websites. i want to write a blog, but i am using that desire to push myself to work on the platform, so i need to complete that blog interface first.by em-bee
5/24/2026 at 7:54:11 AM
They don't want to blog, they want to have bloggedby theodric
5/24/2026 at 9:16:54 AM
”Friends”. Yeah, right.(I admit, I am guilty).
by delis-thumbs-7e
5/24/2026 at 5:26:15 AM
I think writing a static site generator was the first moment I felt like I may be serious about this programming thing.Those losers who still need Perl on their servers better be ready for a mind explosion
...thought, me back in (too lazy to look up which year it was). I probably published like two things with it, spent (what felt like) a million person hours on it, just to abandon it and use Textpattern.
by egeozcan
5/24/2026 at 1:52:56 PM
https://rakhim.org/honestly-undefined/19/by sidpatil
5/24/2026 at 9:47:17 AM
Isn't this the definition of procrastination?by treavorpasan
5/25/2026 at 1:00:40 AM
I'd say more yak-shaving[0] or bikeshedding[1].But I am also currently writing version 2 of an app that utilizes a general-purpose application server that I wrote (took about seven months), at first. It's been shipping for a couple of years. The server does great, but is unwieldy. I suggest against writing general-purpose servers.
The new version uses a newer, more focused, server that is a lot lighter.
by ChrisMarshallNY
5/23/2026 at 10:05:28 PM
I feel so called out ^_^by cultofmetatron
5/23/2026 at 9:59:14 PM
Obligatory XKCD: https://xkcd.com/974/by samch
5/23/2026 at 9:27:55 PM
That's how most of us started blogging lolby phyzix5761
5/24/2026 at 5:02:29 AM
Yeah, I cobbled together an SSG in Guile back in the day.by bitwize
5/24/2026 at 1:50:21 AM
*whistles innocently*by Shellban
5/24/2026 at 12:40:28 AM
[dead]by coreyzzp
5/24/2026 at 3:00:59 AM
[dead]by teaearlgraycold
5/23/2026 at 11:14:57 PM
“Yak shaving”It’s a classic move.
Start a new diet, so you join a gym and or buy a bunch of workout stuff.
I won’t knock it though. An important minority of my yak-shaving endeavors have led to long term positive outcomes.
by katzgrau
5/24/2026 at 12:26:10 AM
You want to play some old classic games so you spend five days getting a Raspberry Pi set up just right with Retroarch and then when it's setup just right you do something else.by shoopadoop
5/24/2026 at 1:11:55 AM
This is a thing I see everywhere. It’s the carpenter who mostly just builds jigs and french cleats for their workshop. Or the programmer who spends far too much time obsessing over what keyboard and font to use.by Waterluvian
5/24/2026 at 12:43:58 PM
For a while I kept finding out co-workers were building their own CNC machines, and the mostly used them to make CNC machines componentsby krupan
5/24/2026 at 5:56:36 PM
I myself am a 3D printer who mostly prints accessories for 3D printing.by CobrastanJorji
5/23/2026 at 8:44:55 PM
I went with paper and pen precisely because there was always more I wanted to do with my computer work flow.by cgriswald
5/23/2026 at 10:45:47 PM
When I need to write something, and I have a computer, and something is inconvenient, I can quickly (well, within minutes, maybe 30 of them) alter it to my liking, and return to writing.When I only have a pen and paper (which I used extensively for writing at school), many things may be inconvenient, but there's no way to fix it. This may turn into a source of a low-key stress, and interfere with my writing much more than tweaking a computer would.
I use Emacs, an ultimate tweaker's tool, for writing every day. Last time I had to tweak something in it was a few weeks ago, and it took maybe 2-3 minutes. It's a small price to pay for a tool that just does what you need, when you need it, with zero mental load, and zero frustration.
by nine_k
5/24/2026 at 1:15:41 AM
For my two main uses pen and paper has two opposite effects. For creative writing it is freeing because it isn’t the last stop but I don’t have to worry about format or placement or anything. I can just go. Typing has a sort of “technical” feel for me, probably due to code, email, and to some degree comments.For notes during study pen and paper are constraining and force me to organize the thoughts in my mind first and then commit them. Mistakes needing to be corrected here is good: It reminds me what I misunderstood.
But, like the sibling poster, the writing goes onto the computer for later editing.
by cgriswald
5/24/2026 at 3:22:16 AM
What in the world do you need to be able to write with pen and paper?It’s pretty much the single function of pen and paper.
by jimbokun
5/23/2026 at 8:50:35 PM
Pen and paper for writing. Computer for editing.by obsidianbases1
5/23/2026 at 9:00:11 PM
Paper notebook. I wouldn’t recommend loose sheets of paper. :) After 15 years of writing notes on loose sheets I would start differently :)Go Tim Ferris way - notebook where the first page is left for the table of contents, and number all even-numbered pages as first step.
by sixtyj
5/24/2026 at 12:38:38 AM
My thoughts are so all over the place that I've settled on 3x5 note cards. It also makes the transition to the computer much easier, because I can re-arrange them in a way that is somewhat organized before taking a picture that gets transcribedby obsidianbases1
5/24/2026 at 12:51:29 AM
You might want to check out Scrivener (Mac and Windows). I use that in lieu of note cards. The cork board function lets you re-arrange text and media to your hearts content and then compile the final output to Word, PDF whatever. It's designed for non-linear writing.by SanjayMehta
5/24/2026 at 4:12:51 PM
The point here is imho that you intentionally remove the computer from the path (in some part of your work) if you want to achieve some focused deep work (in case that you aren’t coding ofc :)by sixtyj
5/25/2026 at 6:04:47 AM
I started out using the back of punched cards, when those ran out, made my own out of scrap paper.Scrivener just matched my workflow - usually for technical reports. Lot of cut/paste from a variety of sources.
by SanjayMehta
5/25/2026 at 11:55:31 AM
I agree with this. It's not that the digital tools don't exist, it's that my best think gets done when I go for a walk with nothing but a pen and a stack of blank 3x5s.by obsidianbases1
5/24/2026 at 3:19:54 PM
Possibility to re-arrange is ofc good when working on something in progress.But how do you archive these cards? That always drove me mad so I use them only for something “encyclopaedical” otherwise it is too much messy.
by sixtyj
5/25/2026 at 11:53:05 AM
At one point I had a physical filing system, but now they get converted to digital pretty quickly since I don't have to pay 10/hr to get it done. I also usually keep a daily card, and sometimes a few weekly/current lists on the note cards and just carry them around until I'm done with them.It's mainly the capturing of the ideas that I prefer writing physically. After that, being able to move them around my digital system makes them most useful because I can have dynamic views that surface priorities and related notes without having to physically sift through the stacks.
by obsidianbases1
5/23/2026 at 9:18:32 PM
I hate handwriting with a passion. I have my whole life. I have horrible handwriting and my hand gets sore 5 seconds after I start writing.I am sure it is because I don't hold my pen/pencil correctly, but I think after 43 years I am not going to suddenly fix that.
by cortesoft
5/24/2026 at 10:48:51 AM
> my hand gets sore 5 seconds after I start writing.Use a fountain pen. You can't press too hard: it bends and breaks the nib.
Disposable ones are good enough now, e.g. the Pilot V-Pen.
https://cultpens.com/products/pilot-vpen-v4-disposable-fount...
by lproven
5/24/2026 at 12:10:34 AM
You sound likely to have dysgraphia, based on the fact I have all the same aspects and a dysgraphia diagnosis.by syntheticnature
5/23/2026 at 10:36:52 PM
I am similar. If I physically write a couple times a week, my hand adapts though. It's a skill like any other.Fountain pens are nice too since you don't need any pressure.
My writing looks a lot better if I just force myself to slow down and be deliberate, but honestly it's a constant battle. I'd definitely benefit from practicing penmanship on it's own.
by NathanielK
5/24/2026 at 1:53:15 AM
Worth mentioning - for a long time, I found my handwriting messy AND my hand would tire out. When I was about a teen-ager, I decided to write in call-caps, very clearly. I've been doing that for a long time now, and worth giving a try.by dv35z
5/24/2026 at 1:56:52 AM
teen-ager? call-caps? Cursive (several hundred years old) fixes this.. all-capitals(caps) or block-caps makes writing more laborious, possibly easier to read (which is why it used to be requested on hand-written forms?)by gnabgib
5/24/2026 at 10:49:24 AM
> (several hundred years old)Several thousand more like.
by lproven
5/24/2026 at 4:47:55 AM
Me too. And I can type so much faster and without thinking about it than I can write.I've had many writing classes in school and different holders for the pen etc but I never managed to improve at all. Writing is just not for everyone.
by wolvoleo
5/24/2026 at 1:20:25 AM
how did you decide which pens to go with?by laweijfmvo
5/24/2026 at 5:05:12 AM
Slow down. I’m still deciding on what size of notebook and whether I go dotted or blank.by cgriswald
5/24/2026 at 2:21:11 AM
I guess I will setup something similar or more complex. But there are alternatives:https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12114947
"George R.R. Martin Writes on a DOS-Based Word Processor From the 1980s". No internet, no multi tasking.
by infinet
5/24/2026 at 11:28:17 AM
That's doing wonders for his productivity.by maleldil
5/24/2026 at 5:54:47 PM
I mean really… he hasn’t finished writing a book that’s narratively trapped but he certainly has been writing and working on a lot more than that one book. He certainly is productive at the very least. Is he satisfying your direct desires and expectations about what he should be working on? No. Does that mean his writing device is unproductive or bad or silly or a waste of time? No.by righthand
5/25/2026 at 6:35:39 AM
It was a joke. I don't care how much he writes. Anything we get from him is a gift.by maleldil
5/24/2026 at 10:47:43 AM
More less why I built this, TBH.by lproven
5/24/2026 at 6:13:46 AM
I'd agree, but in this case they were able to write a blog post that got (as of now) 300+ points and 200+ comments with the content of their work.by rendaw
5/24/2026 at 2:24:26 AM
A good test of your focus on writing is if you can use a boring tool like Substack, Wordpress, Blogger or Github pages (vanilla out of the box ssg setup) and just write.That said this one did write something. But I'd say for anyone else writr 10000+ words on whatever before a single word on your setup.
by dnnddidiej
5/24/2026 at 12:35:37 PM
[flagged]by m_m_carvalho
5/24/2026 at 12:07:53 PM
Just open a term, start opencode, and tell my idea to LLM and ask it to write a passage of given length and save it to a file for me. Then the review loop starts. This is the writing job in the new era.by alexwwang
5/24/2026 at 1:11:17 PM
I'm really, really curious why though? I'm not gonna try to dig at you, I just don't understand and want to know.Is your "writing job" one where the end goal is like short random articles on some giant aggregate, or something like instructional content for businesses or something? Where a human typing things was just a means to an end, rather than what I'd assume OP's doing where they're writing for their own joy and/or because people love their specific voice? Because that's the only way my brain can rationalize it right now.
by kowbell
5/24/2026 at 4:35:53 PM
Actually not. I have my real idea, facts, data and all materials that support my point for a passage. I am just doing an experiment to see if I could find the line by myself. Let me ask you a question, imagine you are living in late 19th and early 20th century as a columnist and you have a secretary. You tell her your idea orally everyday and she typed down your words and revised them to be a column. Not only typing and revising, she even double checked the correctness of all references you mentioned and used in your passage as you indicated.How do you think the ownership of these passages? Created by yourself or both of you? In what degree you would consider the line between you and her efforts?
by alexwwang
5/24/2026 at 5:02:52 PM
Great. I have some thoughts and insights go alone this topic and I’m going to write it down to discuss this issue in detail. Thank you for your initial response.by alexwwang
5/24/2026 at 4:48:10 PM
Also this issue reminds me those women behind the one of the most famous statisticians, the founder of Biometrika, Karl Pearson. AFAIK, he employed a large number of female workers to do those tedious, mechanical and fragmented calculations, which supported his discoveries on statistics. How would you draw the line between his ideas and papers on statistics and those female employees? Would you like to share his honor with those great females?by alexwwang
5/24/2026 at 12:10:59 PM
honestly this explains so much about many blog posts or journalistic articles I read in the last yearby geek_at
5/24/2026 at 4:38:16 PM
What you mentioned depicts the fact that we faced. That’s absolutely not a good thing. But on the other hand, the situation we face ask for a higher critic ability of a person. I think it could be an improvement of this era.by alexwwang