The new Banksy?

Family guy and web developer
The new Banksy?

Started composing a support email to @manton about the custom CSS changes for my micro-blog site as it was taking a while. I was just about to hit send and then I noticed the changes finally went through. Disaster avoided!
I now have Instagram photos feeding through to here as well as links from my Pinboard account and starred posts from my Feedbin account. Be nice if I could customise these feeds by prepending text to each feed before they are posted.
Electron does take some flak for being a performance hog but the appeal of being able to deliver the same app experience to multiple platforms is too big to ignore.
About time I looked at something a little different than the usual web application framework.
... is knowing what is important.
Don't attempt everything. Do what's important. No, not everything is important.
— Jagged Thoughts for Jagged Times, 237 by Nicholas Bate
Thanks Nicholas!
The new Banksy?

If stamps, scruffy-looking nerf herders and laser blasting walking carpets are you thing then these stamps by the Royal Mail might be right up your street.
If you see me bashing away at text editor then you'll know that I'm a die hard Solarized fan. In the last few weeks though I've been using the Dracula colour scheme as well just for a little change.
Colour schemes for text editors and other software tools are a personal choice. There are benefits to the carefully thought out schemes like Solarized where you get a balanced set of colours that works in most conditions. That works for me. For other people though, they might just use a set of colours because they like the colours in the scheme. Everyone is different and has their owns reasons for what they like working with.
Over the weekend I read about a new colour scheme called Monokai Pro, which is based on the popular Monokai colours and it's availability as a colour scheme for Sublime Text 3. I installed the package and spent some time with it over the weekend. What's interesting about this colour scheme is that while the package is freely available for Sublime Text 3 to evaluate, it does require a license to use. The license is 10 euros to buy.
I debated with paying the license fee for what is essentially a list of colours, but when you look beyond that you see that the Monokai Pro colour scheme has a lot more to it than a colour scheme for your code.

The colour scheme changes the interface of Sublime Text as well and there are a number of settings that allow you to customise how different parts of the Sublime Text user-interface look. A very professional finish.
In the end I decided that it was worth the money to buy a license for the package and bought one on Monday.
The most interesting part of this though is not the colour scheme itself but what it is. Yes it's a package for Sublime Text that people can install, yes it's a list of colours that you can change your interface too but other than that it's also a product, a micro-product if you like. And it's not the first product that I have seen that is marketed towards text editors like Sublime Text 3. A few years back I bought a license for the GitGutter package for Sublime Text and I've been using it ever since.
Just goes to show that products come in all shapes and sizes and shouldn't be discounted because of their feature-set or size when compared with similar "free offerings".

The Singletrack review of what is without a doubt, the best hardtail I've laid eyes on, even if it is just a prototype at the moment.