The table dealt cards but settled money by editing a number. So the felt got
the two things it was missing: a bet spot in front of you, and the house's rack
beside the shoe. Every chip is now always travelling between one of those and
the other.
You build a bet by throwing chips onto the spot — the chip you clicked is the
chip that flies. The stake sits there through the hand. The house pays out of
its rack into the spot, and the pile is then swept back to your stack. A loss
goes to the rack and does not come back.
Two rules hold it together. The number under the pile is a readout of the pile,
never the other way round: the bet starts at nothing rather than at a default
nobody put down, and a settled hand leaves your stake back up on the spot,
because otherwise the panel prints "your bet: 300" over an empty circle. And
the chip bar does not move until the chips that justify it have landed — a
counter that pays you before the dealer turns over is a counter that has told
you the ending.
casino-fx.js is the engine underneath: chips fly on an arc, out of a fixed
overlay so no container clips one crossing from a button to the felt. It knows
nothing about blackjack.
Also: cards land with weight and a degree or two of tilt, so a hand looks dealt
rather than typeset; the dealer takes a beat before drawing out; and a natural
gets confetti, which is the only thing in the room that does.
Driven in a real browser, which is the only way to review an animation — and
which is what caught the verdict pill rendering white on white in a dark room,
a chip rack sitting on top of the dealer, and Hit being offered over a table
that was still being paid out. devcasino_test.go is that harness, kept.
The tables were living in the news app's shell: Pete's face in the header
and the footer, the channel nav, search, the reader, the weather canvas,
the PWA. A casino is not a news page with a felt on it.
So it gets its own layout. What carries over is the design language — the
four palette vars, Fredoka/Nunito, the fat rounded cards, the dropped
shadow. What doesn't is every control it has no use for. gamesPage stops
embedding the news pageData, which is what keeps the furniture from
drifting back one convenient field at a time.
It keeps a clock, but tells a different joke with it: Casinopolis by day,
Casino Night Zone from six, palette and felt and the sign over the door all
changing together. The rule lives in roomAt() for the first paint and again
in the browser, so a player abroad gets their own evening.
And the cards are cards now — corner indices in both corners, the bottom
one upside down as printed, pips on the three-by-seven grid every real deck
has used for four hundred years, courts as a letter with the suit over each
shoulder. Driven in a real browser, both rooms, dealt through to a payout.
The engine, the escrow and the wire were all in place; nothing had a browser on
the end of it. This is that end: a lobby, a table, and the five endpoints between
them.
The browser holds no game. It sends intents and gets back a view — the cards it
is entitled to see, and the script of how they arrived, one event per card off
the shoe. The dealer's hole card is not in the payload at all until the reveal,
because a field the client is told to ignore is a field somebody reads in
devtools. The shoe lives in game_live_hands, which also means a redeploy
mid-hand no longer costs a player their stake: the hand is still there when they
come back.
The money is ordered so nothing can be spent twice. The stake leaves the stack in
the same statement that checks it exists, before a card is dealt. Every new hand
is seated with a plain INSERT, so a double-clicked Deal is decided by the primary
key rather than by a read that raced — it loses, gets its chips back, and the
hand in progress is untouched. A double takes its raise up front and hands it
straight back if the engine refuses the move.
Cards are dealt rather than swapped in — they fly out of the shoe and turn over,
which was a requirement and not a flourish. The faces and the chips are still
plain; that's next.
Every dispatch Pete publishes is an accomplishment — a death, a clear, a
milestone — and an accomplishment is a newspaper clipping the moment it lands.
No refresh interval fixes that. So the page never felt alive, and it never was
going to.
The board is the other kind of thing: state that is currently true. gogobee
pushes the whole roster, we replace ours with it, and it renders above the
clippings. An open tab re-polls so it keeps telling the truth.
Replace, never merge: anyone gogobee omits (opted out, no character) drops off
the public page. That omission IS the opt-out — a standing row showing class,
level and zone names the player anyway, so "an adventurer" would have been a fig
leaf.
The snapshot time lives in its own row, because an empty board is ambiguous:
nobody playing, or gogobee stopped talking to us. The page has to tell those
apart — one is a quiet realm, the other is a board that lies confidently, which
is worse than one that admits it lost the wire.
Also teaches Pete "departure", so a bored adventurer letting itself out is news.
Pete's side of the Adventure news feed. Receives structured game-event
facts from gogobee, templates them in Pete's warm-reporter voice, and
publishes to a new /adventure section + live Matrix posts.
- adventure.go: bearer ingest + fact-guard + 13 event templates;
/adventure/{guid} permalink (story.html); per-event SVG emblems at
/adventure/art/{type}.svg (card image + og:image); NoPush suppresses
the live Matrix post (cold-start backfill).
- adventure_digest.go: daily BULLETIN roundup at DigestHour (UTC);
unposted-in-48h = bulletins; marks them digested; per-day ?digest= URL
avoids canonical dedup.
- config AdventureConfig (enabled/ingest_token/channel/digest_hour);
web.New takes the seam + a priority poster; started in main.
- adventure theme colors; thumbURL passes through local emblem paths;
adventure pages are noindex (player-named; gap #5).
Claude-Session: https://claude.ai/code/session_017mEwUmmS7aQTP2NQXj6rUa
The background weather is now GPU-rendered: one instanced-quad draw call
over a baked sprite atlas plus a fullscreen sky shader (fog, Saharan
haze, aurora, sun rays, storm gloom and lightning flash). The old
Canvas2D renderer stays as weather-2d.js and kicks in automatically
when WebGL2 is missing; weather.js is now a thin controller that owns
the toggle, prefs and the PeteWeather API.
Effect upgrades: shared wind with gust pulses leans the whole scene
together, rain gets depth, splash pops and velocity-aligned streaks,
storms grow procedural branched lightning bolts, snow mixes soft motes
with spinning six-arm crystals, clouds drift in two parallax layers,
clear nights get a moon with maria, twinkling stars and the occasional
shooting star, blossoms and leaves tumble with a faked 3D flip.
New variants: haze (Saharan calima), wind (autumn gusts with streak
lines), hail (bouncing stones with drizzle) and aurora. The /weather
demo page switches variant, intensity and phase in place without a
reload and shows the active renderer plus an FPS meter.
The reader overlay opened without moving focus, so Arrow-Up/Down and
PageUp/Down scrolled the page behind it until the user clicked into the
text. Make the scroll container focusable (tabindex=-1) and focus it on
open, and drop its focus outline.
Reader read-aloud now streams neural WAV audio from a new POST /api/tts
endpoint that shells out to Piper, instead of the browser's Web Speech
voice. Each paragraph is synthesized on demand with the next one
prefetched during playback, keeping the existing highlight/scroll sync.
Voices are configured under [web.tts] (piper binary + voices_dir + a
labelled voice list) and exposed to the client as window.PETE_TTS; the
reader gets a Voice selector in the Aa menu, persisted per-device. Still
a signed-in-only perk and gated on auth.
Surface read counts and sharpen the reader:
- story_views table + RecordStoryView on /api/article (background,
filter-guarded); "Popular this week" home rail via TrendingStories;
read-count badge and reading-time chip decorated onto every listing
- reader: signed-in-only read-aloud (TTS), native share/copy, and an
Aa typography popover (size/serif/sepia) persisted per device
- real alt text on card/reader/related/search images; time-of-day Pete
greeting on the home hero
- harden exec() to skip (not panic) on a nil DB so background writes
can't crash on a closed handle
Tests: story_views_test.go, trending_test.go. Suite green, CSS rebuilt.
The account/logout button was a loose justify-between flex child alongside
all the utility icons, so on mobile it wrapped onto a row by itself. Split
the header into a brand bar (logo + account) and a controls bar (utilities +
search + nav) so the account is pinned top-right and never orphaned.
/status was admin-only (404 for everyone else). Serve it to all: a
reader view with per-feed live/idle/delayed status and last-update time,
while admins additionally get poll cadence, item/story counts, paywall
rates, posting times, and raw fetch errors. Error strings are stripped
server-side for non-admins so feed-specific workarounds and upstream URLs
never reach the public payload. Nav status link now shows for everyone.
A multi-session build turning Pete's read-only web UI into something people
return to. Five phases, signed-in features keyed off the OIDC subject; anonymous
visitors keep the reverse-chron feed and localStorage-only state.
Phase 1 — per-user read + bookmark state: user_story_state table +
storage/userstate.go; auth-gated /api/read, /api/bookmark, /api/state and a
/bookmarks page; reader.js syncs state server-side for signed-in users. Also
hides the Matrix-posting UI when posting.enabled=false (web-only mode).
Phase 2 — outbound feeds: storage.ListForFeed + web/feed.go hand-build RSS 2.0
(content:encoded) and JSON Feed 1.1 (no new dep); /feed.xml, /feed.json and
per-channel variants; <link rel=alternate> discovery tags.
Phase 3 — "For you" + related: storage/rank.go scores recent unread candidates
by channel/source affinity + recency decay; RelatedStories via FTS5. ForYou rail
+ /for-you page; public /api/related feeds the reader's "You might also like".
Phase 4 — source-health dashboard: source_health table + storage/sourcehealth.go
(RecordPollResult, ListSourceHealth, SourceContentStats), written by the poller;
admin-gated /status page behind web.admin_subs.
Phase 5 — PWA + offline reader + Web Push: root-scoped manifest.webmanifest and
sw.js (app-shell precache, /api/article runtime cache for offline reading,
offline fallback, push/notificationclick handlers); PNG icons from pete.avif;
pwa.js registers the SW and drives a notifications toggle. Web Push adds
webpush-go, a [web.push] config block (pete -genvapid mints VAPID keys), a
push_subscriptions table, auth-gated subscribe/unsubscribe endpoints, and a
digest sender that pings each subscriber "N new stories" past their watermark,
honoring disabled-sources and pruning gone endpoints.
Tests added beside each new storage/web file; go test ./... and go vet clean.
Reader mode presents the stories on a page one at a time in a focused
overlay, marking each read as it's shown. Left/right arrows (or the header
book button / `f`) page through them; read stories dim on the grid. Read
state is device-local in localStorage.
Backing this required actually capturing article bodies, which Pete wasn't
doing — it kept only the RSS <description> lede and discarded content:encoded:
- stories.content column (idempotent migration; old rows fall back to lede)
- parser keeps content:encoded as paragraph-preserving text
- article fetch already done for paywall detection now also returns its body,
so ingest stores the richer of feed-content vs scraped body with no extra
request (prefers the archive snapshot body for paywalled stories)
- GET /api/article?id= serves the stored text; card queries now select id and
expose it as data-id for the reader
Tests cover content extraction, the storage round-trip, and the article
endpoint + card rendering end to end.
Reuses the saved weather location's lat/lon to fetch us_aqi from
Open-Meteo's air-quality API (no key), folded into the existing 2h
forecast cache (bumped v1->v2). AQI is best-effort: a failed fetch
never sinks the forecast. Shows as a header chip and a colored row
on the forecast card; both self-hide when there is no reading.
Signed-in users get their preferences (hidden feeds, weather location,
weather toggle) stored server-side keyed by their OIDC subject and synced
across devices. Anonymous visitors keep using browser localStorage, so the
site stays public. First sign-in migrates existing localStorage prefs up.
- config: [web.auth] section (issuer, client_id/secret, redirect, session_secret)
- storage: user_preferences table + Get/PutUserPrefs
- web/auth: OIDC code flow, HMAC-signed session cookie, CSRF state + nonce
- web/prefs_api: GET/PUT /api/preferences (auth-gated, 64KB cap)
- frontend: prefs.js sync layer seeds localStorage from server, pushes on write
- header: sign-in / account control
OIDC discovery is non-fatal at boot: if Authentik is down, Pete serves
anonymously rather than refusing to start.
Visitors can save a postal code (international, via Zippopotam) to get the
local forecast from Open-Meteo — a header chip + a 5-day home-page card —
and the canvas background switches from the seasonal effect to live
conditions. Entirely client-side: no keys, no server logic. Geocode cached
permanently, forecast cached 2h. Celsius by default, Fahrenheit opt-in.
New canvas effects: clear (sun by day, shaded moon + stars at night),
clouds (blurred drifting sprites), snow, fog, and storm (rain + lightning).
Seasonal effects remain the no-location fallback.
Visitors can hide individual feeds via a gear-icon panel in the header.
Preferences live in localStorage; the server ships the full source list
(name + channel) as window.PETE_SOURCES so the panel lists every feed,
grouped by channel, regardless of what's on the current page.
Channel pill row outgrew the viewport once more channels were added,
pushing the whole page sideways. Let the header wrap, scroll the nav
inside its own pill, and clip body overflow as a safety net.
Search: new FTS5-backed SearchStories query, /search JSON endpoint,
client-side overlay (search.js) wired into the layout header. EU
channel gets its own theme color (#003399) across bg/text/border/glow
classes. Sources can now route to non-Matrix channels without
validation error (web-only mode); a warning still flags typos.
Bypass-UA retry (Googlebot + Google referer) for soft paywalls, JSON-LD
gating scoped to Article-typed nodes, HTTP 402 treated as explicit
paywall, Wayback freshness filter (30d cap), archive.today as secondary
archive fallback, and transport failures no longer trigger snapshot
swaps. When gating is detected and no archive workaround succeeds, the
story is stored with paywalled=1 and the web card renders a diagonal
red rubber-stamp overlay so readers know the link is gated.
Server picks variant from Lisbon-local date (rain/petals/jacaranda/motes/leaves)
and renders behind content via a canvas particle layer. Each variant has a
hand-drawn silhouette so shapes are recognizable. /weather demo route exposes
variant + intensity + phase pickers, locking the time-of-day phase override.
- Add music as a fourth channel (nav + theme color)
- Glowing themed border on cards that have been posted to Matrix
- Replace per-channel index sections with: "Pete just posted" strip,
channel dashboard (last post, 24h count, totals), unified latest feed
- /img proxy: SSRF-guarded thumbnail re-encoder that resizes to 800px
and runs avifenc -q 45, cached under data/img-cache
- Add -local flag: web/RSS-only mode that skips Matrix login and posting,
so the web UI can be exercised against live feeds without credentials
- Add Makefile (build/local/seed/test/clean) that handles Tailwind +
go build in one shot
- Fix Guardian thumbnails: NormalizeImageURL was rewriting width=1200
onto signed i.guim.co.uk URLs, invalidating the s= signature and
returning 401. Leave signed URLs alone and pick the widest
media:content variant up front instead
- Use pete.avif as the header logo, favicon, and footer mark; drop the
unused leaf.svg
Serves Pete's classified-story archive over HTTP alongside the Matrix
bot. Three sections (gaming/tech/politics), Animal-Crossing-vibe Tailwind
templates, day/night palette driven by the visitor's browser clock.
Web port configurable via web.listen_addr and ${PETE_WEB_PORT} in
docker-compose. Tailwind built in a node stage in the Dockerfile so
deployments don't need node at runtime.