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> I don't think even though TOML has some official spec

Read it on https://toml.io/ (Full spec on upper-right… with its evolutions up to final 1.00 version).


Oh sorry, I missed a comma. It should read: "I don't think, even though TOML has some official spec, ..."

Fixed the comment too.

I know TOML has an official spec.


Yes


How do you want to serve pages without an http[s] server ?


The next innovation I expect to see on HN is a service that, on a set schedule, gathers articles about a set of topics that you follow, prints them out onto paper, and delivers them to you as a bound volume for easy perusal.

This has a number of advantages for privacy (there's no way for the publishers to know how much time you spent reading each story), offline-first availability (dead-tree is the ultimate), and sharing (you can hand someone the entire volume rather than just a link to it, and they get the whole contents, all offline).

It really sounds like it could be the hot new thing, if only some forward-thinking VC would invest in it.


You are joking, but I honestly would like it to get a personalized weekly collection of articles, a wiki lemma, a comic or two and some reviews delivered as PDF or on paper.

The crux being that it's personalized. It could use my Pocket, RSS reader, reddit/hn voting habits, even my bookmarks db as inspiration. I don't know or care, as long as it manages to deliver me a week's worth every week. Filled with content that I'm going to like 90% of the time, i'd love it and pay for it. I'd even accept ads every few pages.


This is what Google promised, and I hope the near future of AI is able to deliver on.


From what I understand and from what I know of Google (or any big tech), this won't be a "weekly" digest, but rather a constant barrage of "personalized" attention seeking push notifications. Breaking news! Something you should comment on! This movie is trending, watch it now! Your friends have read this book, why haven't you!? Kinda stuff.

What I envisioned, is truly slow paced. Like the "old" in depth weekly magazines. Or journals. Something that I have a week to go through, and that doesn't get stale if I don't.

Maybe I should make it myself (though I guess that's my impulsive ADD brain tricking me into yet another hare chase)


> prints them out onto paper, and delivers them to you as a bound volume for easy perusal.

You joke, but this would be great, and something that every digital solution has failed at replicating so far.

The best we have are newsletters (each from a different site/author) which clutter up my inbox and make me not want to read them. A printed weekly digest of everything (preferably with the comment threads included) would be a great way to spend a weekend.


You can get a subset of the English Wikipedia printed and bound, that gives you even more privacy, as you don't need to share the topics you are interested in with any electronic service.

Hint: Using a public (book) library also means your reading behavior is tracked by intelligence agencies, unfortunately, so you need to own the books you may want to read.


Sometimes I wish you could link directly to specific comments on HN to pass around...

Although it needs the context to really appreciate the funny.


The link to a sepecific comment is on the timestamp: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38810949


I'm guessing they mean non-static server. I.e. just nginx without node or php or ruby or python should suffice to serve the static files.


Can't you just disconnect the antenna ?


How can any enterprise only rely on such online services and not keep copies of their job on their own storage ?

At least store in large TB hard disks connected with a SATA adapter when needed, and put them in a case in a safe place (better: two copies, stored in two places). What is the HD + copy time price relatively to production work ?


DocBook…


If this is just a container format for storage / transformation - as I understand the author promote front-end editing tools hiding the storage format, then they just try to reinvent structured text… sgml, xml and all their tools, schema description…


Readability note: 0


"Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something."

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


Unison is already the name of a bidirectional files synchronization software (AFAIR developped in OCaml).

https://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/


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