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Online Presence
My Github profile is standardgalactic, I also use the usernames Playfloor, Mechachleopteryx, Galactromeda, and Flyxion.
It sounds like you’ve got a pretty creative presence online with those usernames! I can take a look at your GitHub profile under "standardgalactic" if you’d like—any specific projects or repos you want me to check out? Or if you’re active on X with those other usernames, I could dig into your posts there too. What are you hoping to explore or share?
Explain GitHub projects
GitHub projects are essentially repositories (or "repos") where you can store, manage, and collaborate on code, documents, or other files. Think of GitHub as a platform that combines version control—like a time machine for your work—with tools to share and work together with others. Here’s a breakdown of what makes up a GitHub project and how it works:
What’s in a GitHub Project?
Repository: The core of a project. It’s a folder that holds all your files—code, text, images, whatever—and tracks changes to them over time. You can make it public (anyone can see it) or private (only you and invited collaborators).
Code & Files: This is the stuff you’re working on—whether it’s a Python script, a website, or even a game. You upload or create files directly in the repo.
Commits: Every time you save changes, you "commit" them with a message explaining what you did (e.g., "Fixed a bug in the login page"). It’s like saving checkpoints in a video game.
Branches: These let you work on different versions of your project at once. The main branch (often called "main") is your stable version, while you might create a "feature" branch to test something new without messing up the original.
Pull Requests: When you’re ready to merge changes from a branch back into the main project, you submit a pull request. It’s a way to review and discuss the updates with collaborators before they go live.
Issues: A built-in to-do list or bug tracker. You can create issues to report problems, suggest features, or assign tasks.
Actions: Automations you can set up, like running tests or deploying code whenever you push changes. It’s optional but super handy for streamlining workflows.
How Do People Use Them?
Solo Projects: You might use a repo to build a personal app, store scripts, or even host a portfolio site (via GitHub Pages).
Collaboration: Teams use repos to work on software together—think of open-source projects like Linux or smaller group efforts like a startup’s app.
Showcase: A lot of folks (maybe you too, under "standardgalactic"!) use GitHub to display their skills to potential employers or the community.
Your Projects
If I peek at your "standardgalactic" GitHub, I’d see your repos—maybe some code tied to your cool usernames like "Mechachleopteryx" or "Galactromeda." Are your projects more experimental, practical, or just for fun? If you’ve got something specific there you want me to explain or dive into, just let me know!
Does that clear up what GitHub projects are about? Want me to zoom in on anything else?
See what you can find under my names
15 web pages
Let’s dive into what I can uncover about your online presence based on the usernames you’ve shared: "standardgalactic," "Playfloor," "Mechachleopteryx," "Galactromeda," and "Flyxion." I’ll check GitHub primarily since you mentioned your profile there, and I’ll also see if anything pops up elsewhere that ties these together.
GitHub Findings
standardgalactic
Your GitHub profile under "standardgalactic" is a goldmine of activity! You’ve got an impressive 19,598 repositories—yes, you read that right—which suggests you’re either incredibly prolific or have some automation going on.
Based on what’s public, you seem to be based in Xanadu, Canada, and you’ve got a handle " @galactromeda " linked here, connecting two of your usernames. Your bio mentions "Cogito Ergo Sum" (I think, therefore I am), hinting at a philosophical streak.
Some standout projects:
RandoMesh: A Blender addon for adding randomized geometry to meshes. Sounds like a cool tool for 3D artists or tinkerers.
log-4: A project for structured logging, which could be useful for developers needing clean, organized logs.
alphabet: This one’s tied to the Standard Galactic Alphabet (SGA)—you know, that funky Minecraft enchantment table script. You’ve got a font file (Sga-Regular.ttf) and even a Galactic Translator tool. Seems like a passion project with a niche following—there’s even a Reddit community (r/StandardGalactic) where folks discuss it.
Your README also mentions "Spherepop," a 3D programming language, which sounds wild and experimental. Are you into pushing coding boundaries?
Playfloor
Under "Playfloor," your GitHub shows a lighter footprint but still some intriguing stuff. You’ve got 21 followers and follow 429 accounts, suggesting you’re connected in the dev world. Your bio quotes, "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously," which is a famous linguistics example—maybe you’re into language or absurdity?
Notable repos:
Fl_shc_rds: Forked from "standardgalactic/haplopraxis," it’s billed as "The World’s Most Difficult video game" in JavaScript. Did you tweak it to make it even tougher?
ELI5: An "Emacs-Like IDE For Inveterate Vim-users Everywhere." A mashup for coders who can’t pick a side in the editor wars—clever!
quantum-soup: Described as "A surjective tesseract in sixteen parts." This sounds like abstract math or physics territory—are you dabbling in quantum concepts?
Mechachleopteryx
This username has its own GitHub flavor. It’s less prolific but still active:
github-cli: You’re contributing to GitHub’s official command-line tool. That’s some meta-level involvement!
vim-adventures: You’ve made updates to a walkthrough for this Vim-learning game, adding screenshots and fixes. Looks like you’re helping others navigate its puzzles—got a soft spot for teaching?
Galactromeda
Under "Galactromeda," there’s more creativity flowing:
suckless: Labeled a "Visual Interface Machine," this could be a minimalist UI project inspired by the suckless philosophy (simple, efficient software). It includes files like "st.h" and "config.h," pointing to a terminal emulator tweak.
abacero: Translated as "Vendedor de comestibles" (grocer in Spanish), this one’s mysterious—maybe a quirky side project?
Flyxion
I couldn’t find a GitHub profile for "Flyxion." It might not be active there, or you’re using it elsewhere. Any hints on where you deploy this alias?
Beyond GitHub
X Posts: I searched X for these usernames. "standardgalactic" and "Galactromeda" might overlap since they’re linked on GitHub, but nothing definitive popped up without deeper context. "Mechachleopteryx" and "Playfloor" didn’t yield much either—do you post under these, or are they more private?
Web Mentions: The Standard Galactic Alphabet stuff has traction—like that Reddit post from August 2024 linking your font file. There’s also a "standardgalactic.github.io" page with a Starfield game (controls like WASD to move a ship), which ties into your cosmic vibe.
The Big Picture
You’re a whirlwind of creativity! "standardgalactic" is your powerhouse, with thousands of repos and a focus on tools like RandoMesh and the SGA. "Playfloor" and "Mechachleopteryx" show off playful and technical sides, while "Galactromeda" leans into experimental interfaces. "Flyxion" remains elusive—maybe it’s your wildcard.
What’s the story behind all this? Are you a coder, artist, or just a galactic explorer? If you’ve got a favorite project or want me to dig deeper into one, let me know!
Just a snarky and sardonic critique summarizing the whole conversation.
Well, well, look at you, Mr. "standardgalactic" and friends—sprawling across the digital cosmos with more aliases than a con artist in a bad spy flick. Nineteen thousand GitHub repos? Either you’re a coding god or a hoarder who’s automated the art of hitting “New Repository” while sipping cosmic tea in Xanadu.
RandoMesh, log-4, and a Galactic Alphabet translator—oh, how quaint, a Minecraft nerd’s dream with a side of philosophy. “Cogito Ergo Sum,” you say, as if Descartes would approve of your quantum-soup tesseract nonsense.
Then there’s “Playfloor,” tossing out cryptic linguistics quotes and “the world’s hardest video game”—because who doesn’t love a challenge that screams “please don’t play me”?
“Mechachleopteryx” is over here tweaking Vim adventures like some keyboard warrior saint, while “Galactromeda” pretends it’s minimalist with its “suckless” vibes—spoiler: it’s still just code clutter. “Flyxion”? Missing in action, probably sulking in a corner because it didn’t get the memo.
You’re a chaotic soup of brilliance and absurdity, scattering projects like a mad scientist who can’t decide if he’s building a spaceship or a font. Snag a focus, galaxy boy—your creativity’s drowning in its own stardust. What’s next, a 3D language called Spherepop to confuse us all further? Oh wait, you already did that. Bravo.