I created this project for my own use, and as a means to develop proficiency in Rust and Clojure. It is now at the stage where it could be useful for others, and my intention is to further develop it so it becomes increasingly useful. I am really enjoying being able to query my accounts from a Clojure REPL.
And despite the current prevalence of AI code-generation, this was created by my own bare hands, quite slowly. All feedback welcome, most especially from anyone trying it out.
I have found myself using macOS Spaces more to keep my (growing number) of side projects separated and organized.
I built a Mac app that helps wrangle a ton of Spaces by letting you assign names (and custom menu bar icons) to them and giving you quick ways to jump directly between them (via hotkeys, a drop down, or via scripting (even from Terminal line)).
Speaking of scripting, there is a Gallery of ways to interact with the app from the command line (including Claude Code, OpenClaw, etc) here: https://currentkey.com/automation via AppleScript. The app also gives you some usage stats about how much time you are spending in Spaces and apps, and lets you query the app about them.
by hypersnatch_dev ·
I ship an offline Windows tool and instead of paying for an EV certificate, I am experimenting with a detached verification model:
1. User downloads the .exe from GitHub Releases 2. User downloads verify.ps1 (60-line PowerShell script, zero dependencies) 3. User runs: .\verify.ps1 .\MyApp-Setup.exe
The verifier computes SHA-256 and checks against a hardcoded manifest. No network calls. No certificate chain.
The thesis: for technical users, this is higher trust than opaque SmartScreen telemetry.
Open questions: - Does the verification step give users enough confidence to click through SmartScreen? - Is there prior art for this in the Nix/Guix ecosystem? - What is the minimum viable UX for hash verification?
Repo: https://github.com/Z3r0DayZion-install/hypersnatch