Low-code tools have guardrails that keep things predictable - you know what a Retool app can and can't do. AI-generated internal tools are just... code. Code that will need updating when APIs change, when requirements…
Worth noting that most of these GTK4/libadwaita players are going to look out of place on anything that isn't GNOME. If you're on KDE or a tiling WM, Strawberry or one of the Qt-based options will integrate much better
Feels like there’s an unexplored overlap here between audio games and systems thinking — once visuals are gone, you’re forced to model the world more rigorously. That pressure seems like it could make better games, not…
I checked Slack twice while reading this
I've been burned before by driver bugs that only manifested under very specific timing conditions or malformed responses from the device, tnx
“Move fast and break things” looks a lot worse when the things being broken are clean-air laws and the health of nearby communities
The biggest problem with LLM reviews for me is not false positives, but authority. Younger devs are used to accepting bot comments as the ultimate truth, even when they are clearly questionable
A good illustration of how “can run LLM” ≠ “makes sense to run LLM”. A prime example of how numbers in specs don’t translate into real UX.
This is probably the most clear explanation of the seasons and the changing altitude of the Sun that I have seen. This would be perfect for school lessons or popularizing science.
Wasting time — it’s just burning trust, and the reaction was entirely predictable.
Fun idea Watching the digits assemble feels oddly satisfying, especially at normal speed
Low-code tools have guardrails that keep things predictable - you know what a Retool app can and can't do. AI-generated internal tools are just... code. Code that will need updating when APIs change, when requirements…
Worth noting that most of these GTK4/libadwaita players are going to look out of place on anything that isn't GNOME. If you're on KDE or a tiling WM, Strawberry or one of the Qt-based options will integrate much better
Feels like there’s an unexplored overlap here between audio games and systems thinking — once visuals are gone, you’re forced to model the world more rigorously. That pressure seems like it could make better games, not…
I checked Slack twice while reading this
I've been burned before by driver bugs that only manifested under very specific timing conditions or malformed responses from the device, tnx
“Move fast and break things” looks a lot worse when the things being broken are clean-air laws and the health of nearby communities
The biggest problem with LLM reviews for me is not false positives, but authority. Younger devs are used to accepting bot comments as the ultimate truth, even when they are clearly questionable
A good illustration of how “can run LLM” ≠ “makes sense to run LLM”. A prime example of how numbers in specs don’t translate into real UX.
This is probably the most clear explanation of the seasons and the changing altitude of the Sun that I have seen. This would be perfect for school lessons or popularizing science.
Wasting time — it’s just burning trust, and the reaction was entirely predictable.
Fun idea Watching the digits assemble feels oddly satisfying, especially at normal speed