I'm Urav. I build things with code.
This section auto-updates daily. It features one of my recent commits, or something interesting from my network, or a random gem from the wild. The commit gets roasted by an opinionated AI and rendered as a strange attractor.
Last updated: 2026-02-16
Commit: torvalds/linux by @Unknown Β· 1da177e
Message: "Linux-2.6.12-rc2
Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history, even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about 3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good infrastructure for it.
Let it rip!"
Review: This isn't merely a commit; it's the genesis for Linux's Git repository, a foundational act delivered with Linus's classic 'history can wait, just get the damn thing running' pragmatism. Kicking it off with a massive, 'unreliable' locking guide immediately sets the tone: acknowledge the hard problems, document them, and figure out the infrastructure details later. Pure, unfiltered Linus.
Chaos: 100% Β· Mood: #1976D2
What is this?
The Pipeline:
- A GitHub Action runs daily and picks a commit (my own β network β starred repos β fallback)
- The commit diff is fed to Gemini, which produces a witty critique, a chaos score (0-100), and a mood color
- A Lorenz attractor is rendered using these parameters:
- Chaos score β modulates Ο (rho), affecting how chaotic the butterfly looks
- Mood color β tints the gradient from black β color β white
- Commit hash β seeds the initial conditions, so every commit is unique
The Math:
The Lorenz system is a set of differential equations that exhibit deterministic chaos. Small changes in initial conditions produce wildly different trajectories. It's the "butterfly effect", fitting for visualizing commits.
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