Today, I decided to mess around with this “Justin Sayles” thing. I’d heard some buzz, so I figured, why not give it a shot? I started by, you know, just Googling it to see what’s what.

Turns out, it’s some kind of, like, a framework or something for…well, I’m not even 100% sure. But it sounded cool, so I kept going.
My Little Experiment
First, I needed to actually get the thing. I went to the website and just started clicking around. It was kinda confusing, to be honest. Lots of technical jargon I didn’t fully understand.
Eventually, I found something that looked like a download button. Clicked it. Waited. And…nothing. Well, not nothing nothing. A file downloaded, but I had no idea what to do with it.
So, back to Google. I searched for “how to install Justin Sayles” and found some forum posts. They were talking about “dependencies” and “compiling” and stuff. My eyes kinda glazed over.
But I’m stubborn, so I kept reading. I followed the instructions as best I could, copying and pasting commands into my computer’s terminal (that black box with the blinking cursor). Most of the time, I had no clue what I was actually doing.

- Downloaded some stuff.
- Copied and pasted a bunch of code.
- Crossed my fingers.
Surprisingly, something actually happened! No errors popped up. I typed in another command they told me to, and…a window opened! It was blank, but it was something.
I played around with it for a bit, trying to figure out how to actually use Justin Sayles. I clicked buttons, typed in random stuff, and generally just poked around.
To be totally honest, I still don’t really get it. But I did manage to get something to work, which is more than I expected. I guess that’s a win, right?
I mean, after spending few hours, I think it’s something could be useful, but I’ll use it another day.
Maybe I’ll look at some tutorials or something later. For now, I’m calling it a day. It’s beer-thirty, anyway.
