It's nice! A few notes: I think, the ability to read the comments of others, who have already cooked a recipe, would be great! Additionally, it would be great to have the possibility to group ingredients, since many times you start with creating two ore three independent mixtures, that you only combine in the end.
My gut feeling, for attracting users, would be to just optimize the recipes to be found by people via search engines. It's great, that you are currently adding images. This is, I think, pretty important for deciding, if I want to cook something or not.
Regarding the comments, I'd really like to implement activitypub on reciperium. To add the ability to follow users and comment on recipes. And to be able to comment and follow from the fediverse. It's a good opportunity for me to explore the protocol.
What do you mean by combining ingredients? You can currently link to other recipes. So if you make a sauce, that can be a recipe on its own, and it can be linked from another recipe. See this for example: https://www.reciperium.com/rodriguezflors/roti
> My gut feeling, for attracting users, would be to just optimize the recipes to be found by people via search engines
That's a good idea, I'm optimizing a bit the search engine now. I've been also thinking of writing a blog
For me, its quite clear from the article, that always returning `true` is not what they did:
"[the ai] predicted 14 earthquakes within about 200 miles of where it estimated they would happen and at almost exactly the calculated strength. It missed one earthquake and gave eight false warnings."
So its:
14 Positives,
8 False Positives and
1 False Negative
In the best case, the developers of e-commerce website create unit-, integration-, and functional tests to make sure, they do not break existing functionality.
But a website is not only code. Its also data and configuration.
Since these types of configuration (e.g. prices, legal texts, bonusses) can change quite often and can get quite complex from the business perspective, it does not make sense to have developers create automatically executable tests to make sure, the website is configured as it should be.
And its often not the developers who change the configuration. Maybe its a product manager, a marketeer or the ceo.
These people often do not know if they configured something correctly. In additiom, they often don't get any notification, if an process, that is important for them, breaks due to a misconfiguration or some bug in the code (not every code base has a test coverage of 100%).
So, I am creating a No-Code Black Box E2E Monitoring Tool, that the process owners/configurators can use to regularly check, if everything is working fine.
From the article, it sounds like Apple aims to create an "AI App Store", where the users can choose the AI Supplier thmeselves instead of only beeing locked in to "Apple Intelligence". I think its a smart move to build an AI platform instead of beeing an AI supplier by themselves.
Can't read the article, but the way they described it in the WWDC Keynote, you _are_ locked into Apple Intelligence on eligible devices for all the stuff Apple Intelligence actually does. The "AI App Store" only comes into play for specific questions that Apple Intelligence punts on and then tells you, "I can't answer this, do you want to query an AI Supplier?" Apple is not giving you the option of selecting a back-end AI Supplier for all AI-related stuff on the device.
I was mildly exaggerating for comic effect, but not kidding. I bought it, I set it up, I filmed it. We still use it every day, and I will be sad when it breaks because they are no more. https://youtu.be/JTvJSRPIo90?si=mjCLawXg6Kt-pDDQ&t=585
I self host my own email using mailinabox. Its working like a charm for my personal use case.
If anyone is interested in setting this up by themselves, here is the opentofu (formally terraform) code I am using: https://github.com/JonasTaulien/opentofu-mailinabox
The odds that this works is basically zero. Your post didn't refer to deliverability at all and the repo's README didn't address deliverability either. I can basically guarantee a portion of your email is not being delivered, you just aren't measuring it.
Its true, that I did not refer to deliverability.
But I can do this now :)
Mailinabox has a dahboard that shows you if you are on any spam list. It will also just stop with the setup, if it detects, that the IP of your machine is blacklisted.
The cases where my email got blocked, I always received an email back from the box, so I think there are no cases where my email just disappeared into the dark.
Reasons for blocking where:
- Some strange spamlist blocked my IP. I was able to resolve this by filling out a i-am-not-a-spammer-form on the spamlist provider
- Some email server required from me that I add my personal address to my website, so that they know who maintains the server
Never have I send an email but it was not delivered without notice
> Its true, that I did not refer to deliverability. But I can do this now :) Mailinabox has a dahboard that shows you if you are on any spam list. It will also just stop with the setup, if it detects, that the IP of your machine is blacklisted.
I have never been on a spam list. My IPs have never been on a blacklist. And yet, my mail was often delivered to spam folder (as opposed to inbox) on Outlook and Gmail.
> The cases where my email got blocked, I always received an email back from the box, so I think there are no cases where my email just disappeared into the dark.
In the vast majority of the cases where your email is not delivered to the inbox of the recipient, you will not get any notification. In these cases your mail will usually be silently placed into the spam folder, and sometimes it will be blackholed completely (not even landing in the spam folder).
While you may not have liked the way it was said, this users reply is actually responding with correct information.
While setting up your own mail server is fun, rewarding, and pretty easy, there are serious problems that anyone considers it needs to be made aware of. Over any serious period of time, the odds that not all your mail is getting delivered approaches and equals 100%. It's a sad reality but a true one unfortunately. If you okay with the fact that some percentage of your email will never make it to your destination (and in many cases you won't know that's happening) then it might be for you. Most people are not okay with that for obvious reasons.
I'm calling out harmful misinformation. It makes me incredibly angry that it's 2023 and people are still peddling self-hosted email. That said, you have a point I've been unnecessarily rude in this thread and I should be more civil.
My gut feeling, for attracting users, would be to just optimize the recipes to be found by people via search engines. It's great, that you are currently adding images. This is, I think, pretty important for deciding, if I want to cook something or not.