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This looks great! Well done. My concern is that there's not a single mention of data privacy. Which is is a red flag for any one coming from an enterprise world. Get that sorted and I'd consider using your tool for actual work.


Hi - we encrypt everything at rest and use metadata to improve LLM performance.

We don't yet have enterprise-grade data permissioning or compliance certificates like Soc2. Those will come in time.


Data schemas and questions asked about data are just as much a company's IP as the data itself. It frustrates me that startups suddenly draw a line here for their own convenience when tuning generative AI. If I (as an employee) publicly posted all our database schemas and report descriptions, I would obviously be violating IP laws. Yet vendors think this "metadata" is fine to use and potentially leak across users.


> we encrypt everything at rest

And where are the keys stored?


We use Amazon’s key management service.


I compared them - and you're still not sanitising the $_POST inputs amongst some other bad practices. So it's great that you've made this and put a substantial number of hours into creating themes for it - but in it's current state (looking at all the branches in your github) it's not fit for purpose.

If you hosted this online, you're simply providing a platform for malicious users to gather targets or worse.

What was/is the goal of this project? To make the smallest CMS? To try your hand at making a CMS and to learn from it? This is unclear.


On github under the first two screenshots I very clearly expressed why I created this, the root cause was and remains the same, I want to continue to improve this script, but the most important task for me was backward compatibility, and simplicity. I love old time-tested technologies, this script (but improved) with additional functionality works as an admin panel on the hosting. I indicated this in the topic. on the hosting site there is our common goal - we are creating a community

if you have a solution - I will be happy to consider it and use it

P.S. the script does not collect cookies and works on text files. That's probably why this method


why would you please such a requirement on the caps lock key? I personally do not have / use it - ever.


For the RequireCapsLock tool I chose caps lock because most people don’t use it very often and it doesn’t have side effects from being held down while pressing mouse buttons.

The idea with this tool is that if your left hand and more of your brain is actively involved in what ever task you’re working on you will complete it more efficiently. I don’t use this tool all the time but do find it useful for certain tasks.


I know this is kinda obvious - but has thrown many people so begs the question, did you have a wireless keyboard/mouse attached that you weren't sure were connected?

But also - check all the software


because Apple designed it this way so that you'd spend more $ on the Pro model.


Are there any laptops that work this way? Why would anyone even want the lid open if they're not using the screen? A stand-alone keyboard is a lot more convenient and you can get one you like instead of the partial one most laptops have.


Why not let the user decide whether they want to use an external keyboard or not in this scenario?


I repeat - are there any laptops that actually work this way? I have a pro and an air and as far as I know if the screen is open, it's turned on regardless of whether I have external monitors hooked up or not.

The original commenter was taking a dig at MacBooks, and I'm calling him on it - where does it say that the Pro will operate like this, and do any other laptops do it? Neither of mine seem to, and my work Dell doesn't either as far as I know.

If the lid is closed, you need to use an external keyboard (obviously). If the lid is open, you can choose to use either the built-in keyboard or an external one. No one ever said you couldn't use an external keyboard. The OP wants to use the built-in keyboard but not the built-in screen (i.e. the screen should be off). The commenter seems to think that it's an intentional anti-feature that is only available on the Pro model. I believe that there are no laptops that do this, and I wouldn't personally care to work that way even if they did.

So to answer your specific comment, the user is always free to use the built-in keyboard or an external keyboard. Unless, of course, the lid is closed - then you pretty much have to use an external keyboard.


I've always been able to disable the built-in display on all my XPS and Lenovo laptops. The choice was given to me to duplicate, extend or disable the built-in screen when casting or plugging external displays. It's also possible to disable the built-in display even if that's the only display available. It doesn't make sense in most cases but it is an option. (If you use your laptop as a cheap server for instance, you may want to keep it open due to how cooling works on XPS laptops)


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