Some existing similar tools for those who might be curious. For vim, there's easymotion or hop.nvim. For tmux, there's Morantron/tmux-fingers. For Chrome, there's Vimium. You can also flash your keyboard to have mouse…
I'm with ya. Meta is making these to get your data, not really to make a compelling i/o-enriched pair of glasses. The changes to their privacy policies plainly show the bait-and-switch.
I can't wait to read the privacy policy. A reminder, users cannot opt out of current Meta Ray Bans data recording/storage/training if you actually want to use them as smart glasses.
Not writing assembly may atrophy your ability to read assembly is my point. We still have to reason about the output of these code generators until/if they become bulletproof.
I wonder if not exercising code writing will atrophy this ability. Similarly to how the ability to read a book does not necessarily imply the ability to write a book. I find that I understand and am more opinionated…
Some existing similar tools for those who might be curious. For vim, there's easymotion or hop.nvim. For tmux, there's Morantron/tmux-fingers. For Chrome, there's Vimium. You can also flash your keyboard to have mouse…
I'm with ya. Meta is making these to get your data, not really to make a compelling i/o-enriched pair of glasses. The changes to their privacy policies plainly show the bait-and-switch.
I can't wait to read the privacy policy. A reminder, users cannot opt out of current Meta Ray Bans data recording/storage/training if you actually want to use them as smart glasses.
Not writing assembly may atrophy your ability to read assembly is my point. We still have to reason about the output of these code generators until/if they become bulletproof.
I wonder if not exercising code writing will atrophy this ability. Similarly to how the ability to read a book does not necessarily imply the ability to write a book. I find that I understand and am more opinionated…