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Today’s session focused on bridging the gap between the offline sandbox and real-world data. I integrated the HTML5 Geolocation API to ping coordinates upon system boot, feeding that exact latitude and longitude directly into a live OpenWeather API fetch request. This allowed me to project real-time local temperature, meteorological conditions, and the current city directly into the central Arc Reactor HUD overlay. To tie the entire ecosystem together and enhance the immersive J.A.R.V.I.S. experience, I engineered an automated welcome protocol within the terminal mainframe. This sequence triggers instantly upon a successful location lock, outputting a dynamic security clearance message customized for the detected city. The entire OS now feels significantly more alive, perfectly complementing the rock-solid local storage and offline blueprint capabilities established in earlier sprints.
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Today’s developmental sprint successfully overhauled the system’s data architecture, transforming temporary network processes into permanent local workflows. In the Schematics layout, I pruned the tactical archives database to focus exclusively on Counter-Strike and Call of Duty: Mobile, transitioning all map arrays from temporary web placeholders to absolute local routing path links for optimized, offline tactical data processing. Concurrently, I upgraded the System Logs engine by engineering a local file-export mechanism utilizing JavaScript Blobs and modifying the window interface with a direct action button, enabling users to physically save and download encrypted text data directly to a local drive as a standardized document to secure data persistence beyond temporary browser memory cache.Yet to add the feature to track weather.
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Just pushed StarkOS v4.0. The whole thing is really coming together as a fully functional, client-side web OS. I built out a central Arc Reactor HUD clock and solid glassmorphic windows with a reliable drag-and-drop system. The J.A.R.V.I.S. terminal is the core router now—typing commands actually launches apps like a persistent local-storage notes app, a media player with a permissive YouTube embed, and a schematics gallery that reads local files and opens them in a custom lightbox modal. I also added some native OS feel by writing a terminal boot-up sequence on page load and overriding the browser’s default right-click with a custom Stark-themed context menu. It’s stable, the UI is locked in, and it actually feels like a real desktop environment now. Next up, I might build a calculator or wire in a live weather API.
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Changed the way the landing homepage looks, making it more refined, neat, and clean. Yet to add my official data in it