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I've been developing SubJS, a JS Runtime tool for agents, for the past couple days. I believe that something like this is the way to give more capabilities to AI agents instead of MCP servers or shelling out.

Let me know your thoughts :)


Maybe this is about doing GET requests to render images in documents or something similar? Not just arbitrarily requesting every link in a file


The fourth one is Finding Nemo


I think you can also hold the key pressed while it's powering on


This is cool! I made a similar project to this one when we switched from GraphQl to regular REST at $work but decided to drop it since I didn't have the bandwidth to work on it.

I see editor support for VSCode, but is it backed by an LSP or is it VSCode only?


It's LSP, and we also have a VS extension in the marketplace.


Sorry, maybe it's too early in the day but I don't get what the lesson was. Could you explain?


(IMHO) the lesson is that sometimes you're excited to tell the world about what you built, that you forget about some "other stuff"

i.e. I don't think that the authors of this tool wanted to have developers be forced to use the latest version of their tool.

It's probably that they didn't think about it when they wrote the code, but now they know and hopefully this gets fixed in the next release?


Yeah, exactly. A lot goes into shipping, and sometimes things like this can be overlooked, especially on a small team that needs to deliver broad platform support right out of the gate.

There are some bugs that are just hard to find until they're out there.


I just don't understand what the thing about "downloading everything as .gz" means. It's not like a gz is a rare file format, it seems like a totally reasonable format to download something in.


Having once made a similar mistake myself, I assume what they mean is that it was downloading everything as a .gz—that is, the browser was asking users “where would you like to save index.html.gz?” instead of showing the homepage. (This happens when you precompress a static site for performance, but forget to tell the server that gzip should be negotiated as a Content-Encoding instead of a Content-Type.)


To clarify, every page load (.html file) was downloaded as a .gz file instead of being served as an HTML file and displayed as a web page in the browser.


I believe they are father and son. The `Books` section on the Toledo family website links to books written by Oscar Toledo G.


Good catch -- those same books show up on the nanochess site:

https://nanochess.org/author.html

Odd that he doesn't mention the "scientist" people may be looking for is his father, but everything else lines up.


I don't see it either on a desktop pc.

I see an `iframe` with this url [1] but the `<body>` of the document is empty. It's very likely you have to change the protocol to `https` (instead of `http`), otherwise the browser refuses to load the url automatically.

[1]: http://player.vimeo.com/video/68089370


it is that - if you turn on the setting "Enable HTTPS mode in all windows" in firefox, the http is automatically converted to an https link and it works.



"Unfortunately so far it only translates into an incomprehensible dead language."


It's also the behavior on Linux with X11 (haven't tried Wayland)


At least on XFCE with X11, this behavior is configurable, you can enable it or disable it, as you wish.


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