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lemmy.today

That website is also pretty snappy for me as a user, but it could be that it's because each webpage looks like it was hand-written rather than having content slog its way towards the user through a sea of Javascript frameworks.

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lemmy.ca

I wrote a webserver for my own website analytics, running with go on a raspberry pi from an SD card it could handle 5k requests per second.

Modern computers are fast if you don't fill them with shit.

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But why do people want their text editors to do completely unrelated tasks? Genuine question.

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piefed.social

Another reason to use nvim over emacs. Precisely what I needed today folks
Doing the Lord's work OP

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lemmy.today

Still a limited selection of vim webservers though. Have to bump that library size up.

https://iloveemacs.wordpress.com/2016/02/27/writing-web-apps-in-emacs-lisp/

There are several solutions for running a webserver in Emacs like Elnode from Nic Ferrier, httpd.el from Joe Schafer, simple-httpd from Christopher Wellons or Emacs Web Server from Eric Schulte.

And then there's the browser side!

https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_mono/eww.html#Top

EWW, the Emacs Web Wowser, is a web browser for GNU Emacs that provides a simple, no-frills experience that focuses on readability.

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"This Website is Served from Nine Neovim Buffers on My Old ThinkPad" | Spyke