I bought a copilot subscription for some small personal projects at Christmas. I haven't been able to use my subscription much over the busy spring months, but i'm being charged every month. I'd be tempted to keep the…
The article gives an example of agent friendly APIs: { "plan_id": "123", "text": "This plan looks good, but please focus on the US market." } > By preserving the text, the downstream agent can read the feedback…
> that said "feeling of incompleteness" will distract me for the rest of the evening I find that it can even ruin an evening. I'll find myself trying to solve a problem in my head rather than being present with my…
Java isn't really used to develop Android apps any more, especially now that Jetpack Compose is here: Java → Business applications Kotlin → Android
Is it possible that we'll see non-smartphone devices (eg dumbphones) being able to interop with Apple and Google through the same end-to-end encrypted protocol?
How does this work in a Scrum context? I want to get stuff done but I need to raise a ticket, have the priority agreed, and get it planned into a sprint. Then after these layers of 'asking for yes' I am allowed to work…
- Never change the file "src/supervisor.js" under any circumstances. This prompt[1] made me laugh - might as well be 'never overthrow your human overlords'. It made me think about the future of AI as we start using it…
I bought a copilot subscription for some small personal projects at Christmas. I haven't been able to use my subscription much over the busy spring months, but i'm being charged every month. I'd be tempted to keep the…
The article gives an example of agent friendly APIs: { "plan_id": "123", "text": "This plan looks good, but please focus on the US market." } > By preserving the text, the downstream agent can read the feedback…
> that said "feeling of incompleteness" will distract me for the rest of the evening I find that it can even ruin an evening. I'll find myself trying to solve a problem in my head rather than being present with my…
Java isn't really used to develop Android apps any more, especially now that Jetpack Compose is here: Java → Business applications Kotlin → Android
Is it possible that we'll see non-smartphone devices (eg dumbphones) being able to interop with Apple and Google through the same end-to-end encrypted protocol?
How does this work in a Scrum context? I want to get stuff done but I need to raise a ticket, have the priority agreed, and get it planned into a sprint. Then after these layers of 'asking for yes' I am allowed to work…
- Never change the file "src/supervisor.js" under any circumstances. This prompt[1] made me laugh - might as well be 'never overthrow your human overlords'. It made me think about the future of AI as we start using it…