Hey! No interface with claude web - its really just a ui for using either codex or claude code locally in one place. Switching is super easy (one toggle under input area) but you cant change mid convo!
Then they still have to take them. Russia's having trouble with the first step. Some of the other steps are going to require facing off with all of NATO. That's going to be harder.
China may be able to take Taiwan. First they have to get enough stuff across the straight. That's not easy. To do it, they have to own the sea and the air, which means that they have to have disabled most of the American assets within hundreds of miles. That's not easy either.
They can form the agreement (the Moscow-Beijing Axis) if they want. "Taking" is harder.
These days, if you're developing something for profit it's pretty hard to see your software as ethical. You're either trying to empower your user or trying to monetize them, the two will always fight one another and snuff the other out unless you, the developer, take a stand.I fully understand the market for proprietary software, but trying to define some ethical middle ground is just blatant lip service, nothing else.
> More to the point, if a law is passed that says "all browsers must do X,Y and Z". How to you enforce that in a world where open source is so prevalent?
Easier to enforce it on browsers than EVERY SINGLE website that uses cookies for tracking, no?
If you tell the website “no don’t track me” it can’t even remember not to track you (because doing so would be tracking you!) so they have to ask every time.
If you tell the browser no, it would just block the site from storing any info in the browser. It would ask you once only the first time you visit a site, and you can change it whenever in the toolbar. Problem solved, no?
> If you tell the website “no don’t track me” it can’t even remember not to track you (because doing so would be tracking you!) so they have to ask every time.
Not always, or even close to most of the time—but the poisonous comments unfortunately stand out so much that they loom large in one's impression of these threads.
(1) maybe OP has AWS or GCP credits (very easy to get from these companies’ startup ambassadors)
(2) If there’s ever a greedy actor taking up resources, it seems like they would be relying on the system to the point where they are willing to pay for it.
This is exactly the right way to start a business... Do one thing well in a way that doesn’t scale — this gives you the opportunity to learn from customers and build better offerings.
Why do you think AWS and GCP give out free credits to begin with?
A tiny utility to cheat the App Store review process and ship any feature you want. Why? Because Apple likes to remove apps that compete with their own.
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