I’ll be taking a look at Brave for my Linux systems and part of this will be self hosting sync and also testing the iOS app. Mostly for sharing tabs etc. I have to say I’m pleasantly surprised by their defaults so far. image
I’m curious what else is caught in the crossfire when using this for blog posts for example. I actually do not know how accessibility features and devices would handle this kind of output. Adds invisible unicode characters to text which LLM do not seem to be able to handle.
I’ve played the first two chapters of Dispatch and it’s fun. But it also feels like one of those games where you think “I want X to be the outcome” and you got no idea if you are making the right decisions or if X is possible. So either high replay value or a web search for a guide (I avoided all spoilers so far) The quick time events are okay. You do something. But they don’t carry the game and j don’t think turning them off takes away from it.
Seeing Rust bros work extra hours to explain why “the language that cannot fail at runtime” failed at runtime for holding it wrong is kind of amusing. In all seriousness - it’d be easier to stop pretending there’s a silver bullet in language design and just accept they all suck one way or another.
I voted for Django’s next board last weekend. Since then I’m going back and forth if we are better setup to deal with situations where someone turns into a Hamburger Helper. I think so and I hope so. Looking at the PSF and how long certain people got away with behaving in (IMHO) unacceptable fashion the important thing would be acting fast enough before damage is done. And this is the one thing I cannot be sure about would happen.
I am in a meeting while my ML system is training a small neural network. There is no fan noise, no excessive heat and no draft at my leg from the fans. This is weird, pleasant and a bit irritating. Worth pulling cables for half a day :)