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programming·ProgrammingbygetFrog

(OC) Open-sourcing my full implementation of Material Design 3 based theming

cross-posted from: https://piefed.social/c/webdev/p/2066757/oc-open-sourcing-my-full-implementation-of-material-design-3-based-theming

I recently realized that I've been tinkering on my main hobby project for a year now, and that it's not even remotely at a point where I'd be willing to publish it (either by actually launching it or by Open-sourcing and handing it off to someone else). But one of the features I built in recently, a fully customizable website theming function, seemed actually pretty solid and pleasant to use, so I'd like to share it within this separate project.

-> Here's the link to my live demo
-> Here's the link to my codeberg repo

If you have any questions, feel free to ask them here! I realize that documentation is not my strong suit haha
Any feedback or suggestions are appreciated as well :)

https://getfrog.codeberg.page/froggy-material-3-demo/dist/Open linkView original on piefed.social
webdev·Web DevelopmentbygetFrog

(OC) Open-sourcing my full implementation of Material Design 3 based theming

I recently realized that I've been tinkering on my main hobby project for a year now, and that it's not even remotely at a point where I'd be willing to publish it (either by actually launching it or by Open-sourcing and handing it off to someone else). But one of the features I built in recently, a fully customizable website theming function, seemed actually pretty solid and pleasant to use, so I'd like to share it within this separate project.

-> Here's the link to my live demo
-> Here's the link to my codeberg repo

If you have any questions, feel free to ask them here! I realize that documentation is not my strong suit haha
Any feedback or suggestions are appreciated as well :)

https://getfrog.codeberg.page/froggy-material-3-demo/dist/Open linkView original on piefed.social
gardening·GardeningbygetFrog

I bought some dodgy strawberry plants, help me identify all the bugs on them?

I have a few non-prime spots open in my strawberry tower, and I didn't want to put really good expensive strawberries in there because they'd either die or produce badly anyways. Now I'm not sure if it was a good idea, but I saw some half-off strawberry plants at the nursery yesterday and they didn't look too bad, so I picked them up.
I was 100% prepared for them to be infested with something, so I chopped off all dodgy looking leaves and all flowers right away and am keeping them quarantined inside for at least 1-2 weeks (all my other strawberries are outside on my balcony). I rinsed them off very thoroughly, first with running tap water then with slightly soapy water from a squirt bottle. the plan is to do that twice a day until I see no more bugs.
Here's all the bug varieties I found before rinsing this morning:




My guess is that it's just green aphids? Although that fat round fella from the first picture and the white guys from the last picture are throwing me for a loop, so I'm not 100% sure.

Do you think rinsing twice a day will be good enough to get rid of them?

View original on piefed.social
fuck_ai·Fuck AIbygetFrog

I'm so fucking tired..

..of how little any of my coworkers seem to care about the security implications of the stupid ass ai tools. They treat me like I'm crazy to suggest that maybe Claude shouldn't be able to read their Artifactory/npm token because we still don't have granular permissions on those and every token has publish permissions. ugh.
They literally have to go out of their way to give Claude access to that file too, and the only benefit is that it can run an npm install all by itself (absolutely stellar idea with the influx of npm supply chain attacks we're having).

Or when I suggest that maybe it's not a great idea to give Claude a git token with full write permissions to all repos, because commiting things from outside of the Claude terminal isn't even that much of a hassle. I'd get taking some security shortcuts if there was any actual benefit, but this is just so unnecessary.

And any time I point at any of the crazy security flaws the one mega-annoying coworker that vibecodes everything goes "uuhh no it's pointless to make the AI more secure because regular developers have a lot of permissions too and an angry developer could do way more damage than the AI".
Trying my hardest to not take him up on that.

View original on piefed.social

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