Work related: The Culture Map - can strongly recommend!
Non-work: the Alex Rider series. Both entertaining and serious when it needs to be without being super grim.
Agreed. My 3 free apps, one with +100k downloads were also removed because of the EU ruling. Don't want my personal address and phone number to be more accessible to bad actors more than it already is. While I can somewhat follow the idea, the execution in practice has serious flaws.
My bluetooth headphones occasionally drop the connection for a moment when I'm standing to my microwave which is warming up food. 2.4GHz after all. Bluetooth and USB 3 don't play along that well either btw.
Plenty of developers paste arbitrary bash commands posted on sites like GitHub without thinking because they look "legit", I suppose. I see it similarly as you do: StackOverflow (and Copilot) can be helpful to start but it's.
Had an exchange like this some time ago:
Me: Hey, I'm reviewing your PR. Looks pretty fine to me. Except for this function which looks like it was copy-pasted from SO: I literally found the same function in an answer on SO (it was written in pure JS while we were using TS in our project).
Dev: Yes, everyone copies from SO.
Me: Well, in that case I hope you always copy the right thing. Because this code might run but it is not good enough (e.g. the variable names are inexpressive, it creates DOM elements without removing them after they are not needed anymore).
Curious to know what advantages Insomnia has/had over Postman beyond being MIT licensed.
Postman's initial startup time could be a bit faster but other than this I'm not missing much (yet). I used it for years occasionally before finally creating an account not so long to sync my requests across devices.
BTW: Jetbrains IDEs like WebStorm also have an integrated HTTP client.
Curious to know why this is the case? I haven't played around with LLAMA yet but I figured it being open-source would make it more trustworthy than models provided by OpenAI.
Absolutely not. The LLAMA license [1] is clear that it's not open source. It's for non-commercial, research only, and only by explicit permission from Meta. The weights were leaked, on 4chan [2], illegally, according to the license. Very very few people are using it legally. This interpretation is clear from its wording, and also matches the interpretation of our flock of lawyers.