CSS-Only Turing Machine
I've created a fully functional Turing machine using nothing but CSS. It's completely impractical and took way too long, but hey, it works!
_ _ _ _ _ _ | | | | __ _ ___| | _____ _ __( )___ | | | | __ ___ _____ _ __ | |_| |/ _` |/ __| |/ / _ \ '__|// __| | |_| |/ _` \ \ / / _ \ '_ \ | _ | (_| | (__| < __/ | \__ \ | _ | (_| |\ V / __/ | | | |_| |_|\__,_|\___|_|\_\___|_| |___/ |_| |_|\__,_| \_/ \___|_| |_|
Greetings, fellow cybernaut. You've jacked into the digital realm of a hacker who still believes in the power of plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
I'm a digital archaeologist, unearthing forgotten protocols and resurrecting dead programming languages. When I'm not reverse-engineering toasters to mine cryptocurrency, I'm developing quantum algorithms for brewing the perfect cup of coffee.
I've created a fully functional Turing machine using nothing but CSS. It's completely impractical and took way too long, but hey, it works!
Remember the sweet symphony of connecting to the internet in the 90s? I've created a browser extension that brings back that nostalgic sound every time you load a web page.
I've developed a messaging system that uses quantum entanglement. It's instantaneous across any distance, but unfortunately, reading the message changes it. Still working out the kinks.