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Moby Dick Workout

▲ 109 points 34 comments by helloplanets 4d ago HN discussion ↗

Pangram verdict · v3.3

We believe that this document is fully human-written

0 %

AI likelihood · overall

Human
100% human-written 0% AI-generated
SEGMENTS · HUMAN 1 of 1
SEGMENTS · AI 0 of 1
WORD COUNT 239
PEAK AI % 0% · §1
Analyzed
Jul 5
backend: pangram/v3.3
Segments scanned
1 windows
avg 239 words each
Distribution
100 / 0%
human / AI fraction
Verdict
Human
Pangram v3.3

Article text · 239 words · 1 segments analyzed

Human AI-generated
§1 Human · 0%

12 Apr 2022

How many items should your todo list handle? Not the most pressing question in the world, but one that I sometimes wonder about. I think productivity apps should scale to “user generated” content. I don’t expect every app to load multi-gigabyte log files, but it should handle what I can write myself. I use “Moby Dick” to test that. I know it’s longer and uses bigger words than anything I’ll write. If the app works well with “Moby Dick” then that’s a good indication that it will handle my needs also. Here’s the test:

Open “Moby Dick”. Fast? Scroll to end. Resize the window. Fast? Scroll to middle. Resize the window. Fast? Select all. Cut, Paste, Undo. Redo. App still standing? Edit some content near the middle. No typing lag? No scroll jumping? Repeat 2-5 until you get bored, then open macOS Activity Monitor and see if it’s using acceptable amount of Memory.

Computers are really fast, Moby Dick is tiny compared to this fastness. If an app doesn’t pass this test that suggests to me that there might be problems. This is just a test–a good app for you might fail this test, a bad app for you might pass. Test Files:

MobyDick.bike

This is what I use to test my app Bike Outliner

MobyDick.opml

This is OPML file useful for testing outliner apps

MobyDick.markdown

This is a Markdown file useful for testing markdown apps