# I am the Watcher. I am your guide through this vast new twtiverse.
#
# Usage:
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/users View list of users and latest twt date.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/twt View all twts.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/mentions?uri=:uri View all mentions for uri.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/conv/:hash View all twts for a conversation subject.
#
# Options:
# uri Filter to show a specific users twts.
# offset Start index for quey.
# limit Count of items to return (going back in time).
#
# twt range = 1 5
# self = https://watcher.sour.is/conv/kuixcsa
@movq Oh, now I see, thanks. These barriers seem like a cool idea to try some time myself.
Alright, multipass is basically for administrating multiple systems at once. Good thing, I'm not an admin. :-) But now I remember a good mate doing this, too. If I'm not mistaken, he used tmux's builtin functionality to update all his, I don't know how many, machines at the same time. Pretty cool actually. This also reminds me that I really should finally take a deeper look at tmux some day. Never did that before. I just open a new terminal and my tiling window manager takes care of most things, well the layout. Except that I would have to explicitly ssh into the other system if I were working some remotely.
Yes, I'm on i3 and really not in a mood to fiddle around and waste my time with broken or unfinished stuff if I can easily avoid it. I just want my system to work. :-)
@lyse
> I just open a new terminal and my tiling window manager takes care of most things
That’s what I do, too. I only use tmux on the servers, in case I get disconnected. But a WM is much, much better at, well, managing windows. tmux always feels like a crutch and comes with its own set of issues (mainly: it is a terminal emulator itself and does not necessarily support all the escape sequences that the host does).
@lyse
> I just open a new terminal and my tiling window manager takes care of most things
That’s what I do, too. I only use tmux on the servers, in case I get disconnected. But a WM is much, much better at, well, managing windows. tmux always feels like a crutch and comes with its own set of issues (mainly: it is a terminal emulator itself and does not necessarily support all the escape sequences that the host does).
@lyse
> I just open a new terminal and my tiling window manager takes care of most things
That’s what I do, too. I only use tmux on the servers, in case I get disconnected. But a WM is much, much better at, well, managing windows. tmux always feels like a crutch and comes with its own set of issues (mainly: it is a terminal emulator itself and does not necessarily support all the escape sequences that the host does).
@lyse
> I just open a new terminal and my tiling window manager takes care of most things
That’s what I do, too. I only use tmux on the servers, in case I get disconnected. But a WM is much, much better at, well, managing windows. tmux always feels like a crutch and comes with its own set of issues (mainly: it is a terminal emulator itself and does not necessarily support all the escape sequences that the host does).