I think as people move to Linux on handheld (presumably) they will get more interested about who/what/how their machine is being utilized. They'll want to keep it as clean as possible to improve battery life, maximize speed and decrease bandwidth costs.
I think the "one machine per person for everything" is the future with multiple adapters being available depending on the situation. That will coincide with more crypto usage too.
Maybe you could take micropayments at some point as well.
Just out of interest, for dialtoneapp.com - how are you viewing browsing stats? Are you able to identify actual humans? Would make for an interesting widget: "3 humans viewing now."
I didn't say I hate it. But I do think that there's a lot of overlap between people who feel overwhelmed with A.I. Slop and people who felt overwhelmed with crypto-FOMO back when there was such a thing.
My analysis could lead to "it's doomed" or "it's a gateway drug that expands the crypto market".
i'm always copying what claude code says and pasting in slack but the format is off from hard returns. Or claude will give me multi-line curls to run and I can't just copy paste them.
"The average ancient historian led troops, tutored a prince, governed a province, advised a king, made a fortune, fell from favor, was exiled, and buried 7 of their 10 children. The average modern historian passed a few tests then wrote a book on their laptop next to their cat." so good!
PNANA was originally developed simply to serve as a replacement for nano on Linux. It comes with a host of out-of-the-box editing features, and our development was primarily inspired by Marco and Nvim.
yeah, this is true. I really miss many of the early day startups I was part of. But leaving my well paying remote job to chase that isn't something I can do anymore. Hoping to re-create the best of both worlds but we'll see...
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