Deal
Salad + garlic bread. Final offer.
For me personally, there is only two applications of LLMs in programming:
- doing tasks I kinda know how to do, but don't want to properly learn (recent example: generate pgf plots from csv data in matplotlib. 90% boilerplate, I last had to do it 3 years ago and vaguely remember some pitfalls so can steer the LLM in that direction. Will probably never again have to do this, so not worth the extra couple hours to properly learn
- things I would ordinarily write a script for, but aren't worth automating because they won't come up in the future again (example: convert this Lua table to a Nix set)
Essentially, one-off things that you know how to check for correctness.
Ah damn it -.-
Too bad, the app is really nice to use :/
It would be if it's a one-time payment, but it's a yearly subscription, and not a cheap one!
Maybe. But there are third options as well - maybe if Adobe acts like you describe, and there is sufficient Linux adoption, that opens the door for an actual crossplatform competitor.
Or maybe they change their mind when not doing so costs them money.
I dont exactly like passkeys, but yes, from a technical standpoint, they do indeed solve Phishing
Nvidia Shield. The bigger one.
Yes, it's a couple of years old at this point, but it's still the best device of its kind.
Not to mention the remote is FANTASTIC.
Funniest thing is, this video series ultimately landed him the job as lead UX designer for Musescore, lol
And Smarttube Next on the TV/firetv/Android TV.
It was pretty great, wasn't it?
Although I must say. I eventually landed on neovim. Steep, steep learning curve, but now I would not switch back again.
Yeah, should have gone with that one... :D