Technically this is the case, but due to operator pricing wifi is is still good option. 5G comes with the roaming charges (not so much problem within EU, although there are data caps) and at least local operators here in Finland don't really have good 5G packages for people with multiple devices.
Maybe they got so far thanks to the Discord approach.
When you went to the Discord, you immediately got the endless stream of great looking stuff other people were generating. This was quite powerful way to show what is possible.
I bet one challenge for getting new users engaged with these tools is that you try to generate something, get bad results, get disappointed and never come back.
That's exactly true, and having built a similar bot for friends and acquaintances to use, the effect in question is huge. It makes no sense to go for a webapp first, second or even third.
>How can anyone compete against a trillion dollar company that's fine with subsidizing an unprofitable business line?
It sounds like impossible, but it's not always. Sometimes large companies loose the focus and become slow. There can be multiple competing products and teams are prevented from building the best product in order to not interfere more profitable business. Microsoft for example has both GitHub and Azure DevOps.
One example of how the infinite resources do not always help. Year ago GitHub decided not proceed with adding support for Python packages in GitHub packages.
"This is no longer planned due to a change in our strategic priorities and the allocation of our resources towards higher-priority initiatives." [1]
> Microsoft for example has both GitHub and Azure DevOps.
Not sure what you meant, but this is indeed visible in GitHub, maybe in positive way. GitHub Runners are specifically coded with C# and ASP.NET Core and designed to be used on Azure, while not limited so. Maybe the adaption of current GitHub Actions would not happened so efficiently without this.
The main problem with secure device based 2FA is how to handle the case when device gets lost and you don't have backups (many people don't really think this kind of stuff beforehand). How can a person re-establish their identity? For services like Google, Facebook etc. the answer might be "you don't", but it is more difficult for companies where the end user is also the customer.
And I think the best answer is government issued digital identity and being able to use that to recover your access to the online services (of course up to you if you wish to make this connection).
I no longer bother to answer anything to cold emails or LinkedIn messages. Despate the personal tone, they seem to mostly driven by marketing automation tools.
Maybe in future I will have my ”AI secretary” to answer those and have a discussion with the ”AI sales assistant”.
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