Yeah, same here. I’ve got to the stage where what I write is mostly just for myself as a reminder, or to share one-to-one with people I work with. It’s usually easier to put it in a blog post than spend an hour explaining it in a meeting anyway. Given the state of the internet these days, that’s probably all you can really expect from blogging.
nice! An api is something i'm interested in, but for now it makes more sense to provide a GUI for more precise control. My thinking is that an API call to translate images would not allow for enough precision over the end result. What kind of solutions were you exploring for this problem?
Pretty neat. I use Emacs a lot, and also do quite a bit of video trimming. For people wondering "why Emacs?", here’s the use case: trimming video is mostly about writing down start/end times, sometimes with a note. That’s all text.
If you can turn that text directly into clips without switching to a separate video editor, it’s surprisingly efficient. Of course, this only makes sense if you already live in Emacs, then it reduces context switching, helps to keep the flow. If you don’t, it just looks odd. But it’s not about making a meme out of "doing everything in Emacs" - it is just a small tool that fits the workflow of people who are already in that environment.
Love nyxt - I am just waiting for when I will be able to use sites like youtube with it (or other common site just not compatible yet with the web engine.) They have a road map to move to Blink/Chromium which would make the site compatible with today's modern web.
Honestly pretty good for AI generated content. It would benefit some extra human editing to fine tune the jokes and make it easier to flow but in itself it is pretty good and actually address some interesting point without being too serious about it, which is sometime refreshing.
That's not a feature I'm required to use on Android, MacOS, Windows or Linux. If it's not Apple's decision to enforce it then I wonder who would degrade the experience like that?
This is pretty awesome. Would be better when the compromised domain list get updated. Just imagine what could be done in terms of alternative search products to replace the fallen Google (not even commercially, but just a search product that actually work)
Appreciate the kind words! I agree, there's a lot of untapped potential in domain-level data. A regularly updated compromised domain list would definitely be a valuable extra, I am working on adding it as soon as possible!
Thanks! This is the whole idea. You summarized it very well. However, bootstrapping like this until receiving first funds requires a lot of effort, determination, and a team that understands the process. We are lucky to have it.