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How does LibreOffice save people hundreds?

By providing a free competent competitor to other Office software bundles.

I'm confused. Isn't coreutils a just small subset of even macOS's current zsh's builtins? What do you prefer about systemd to launchd? defaults seems like a convenient way to manage settings. Is it confusing for people from other operating systems?

I think it’s a great reaction to news stories to imagine how you could have made the same bad decisions. Furthermore this public confession of being able to imagine making bad decisions might encourage a similarly minded to 20-something to wonder why an older version of themself is so afraid of even having such a dataset. It might even prompt someone to destroy some long forgotten cache of data they exfiltrated a long time ago.

I don’t think there’s a risk that it will influence a rare person in power to enforce the rules to go lighter. I just think it encourages people to be less reckless with hoarding data who might otherwise put themselves in danger.


Over and above the fact that everyone should already know that the SSN database is extremely sensitive, DOGE had to strong-arm people out of the way to gain access to it in the first place. Even a fresh twenty-something should have known better than to download the entire thing onto a flash drive and carry it around, let alone take it home with them, and especially not to share with a future employer.

The idea that could be done accidentally and innocently lacks any sort of credulity. It's so far out of the ordinary that I don't think applying Hanlon's Razor can be done in good faith.


The maximum memory configuration for the M3 Max MBP was also128GB.


That's my whole point. M3 Max 128GB -> M3 Ultra 512GB. M5 Max 128GB -> M5 Ultra 512GB. But if M5 Max 192GB -> M5 Ultra 768GB, i.e. Ultra having 4x the memory of Max.


command+shift+g

Then

s<tab>/l<tab>/cores<tab>/a<tab>

Simple!

However, while Spotlight works well when you know what you are looking for, it can still be useful to navigate the filesystem, and it's too bad that Apple hides tools in relatively obscure locations rather than somewhere like /Applications/Utilities.


I use macOS most of the time, but switch to a Windows VM for Excel. Without the same keyboard shortcuts, the macOS version ends up having a fraction of the power available to experienced users of the Windows version. For people who use Excel extensively, LibreOffice or Google Sheets would have to offer some remarkable new killer features to make it worth the switch. I don’t think feature parity alone would make the benefits of Linux outweigh the significant transition costs.


Out of curiosity, why are the shortcuts different?

I get the notion of shortcut conflicts, but, at a glance, this should be a trivial one click setup to set the desired shortcut config, wouldn’t it?


They are like Vim. “Alt,letter,letter,arrow,letter,letter,arrow,enter”, etc. Rather than a single combination of keys, it is a series of key presses.

I agree that it might be trivial to set up for spreadsheets, and it would be really useful for other spreadsheets, and many other applications. I suppose a hurdle is how context sensitive the commands are depending on the cell or range of cells activated, and their contents and data type.


I mean, I think not having Copilot being shoved at you and not having advertisements pushed on you and having recovery tools that actually work and basically a lifetime of free updates would be a pretty big value add for Linux over Windows, and those go beyond feature parity.


In practice the 4bit MLX version runs at 20t/s for general chat. Do you consider that too slow for practical use?

What example tasks would you try?


Whenever reasoning/thinking is involved, 20t/s is way too slow for most non-async tasks, yeah.

Translation, classification, whatever. If the response is 300 tokens for the reasoning and 50 tokens for the final reply, you're sitting and waiting 17,5 seconds for processing one item. In practice, you're also forgetting about prefill, prompt processing, tokenization and such. Please do share all relevant numbers :)


It is a mixture of experts model so it will run on a computer with a lot of RAM and a GPU.

Alternately, on an M3 Ultra Mac Studio with 256GB of unified memory, you can run a 4bit quant of GLM-4.6 at about 20 tokens/second. That compares to about 40 t/s for a 6bit quant of MiniMax M2. I am not sure how fast these will run if you have a Mac Studio 512GB that can load the unquantized versions of the models.


Or, $8,070 https://www.apple.com/shop/product/g1ce1ll/a/Refurbished-Mac..., and it's not unheard of to get at least another 10% off by using gift cards.


that's the 96GB version, GP was talking about 512GB.


I think my link didn’t include the Javascript to choose the 512GB configuration, but it comes out to $8070, and their refurbished models are indistinguishable from new.


I think a surprising number of companies only survive because Microsoft Office gets around hostile internal IT departments and gives workers capabilities they can’t otherwise get on their locked down workstations.

It was only in 2007 that the row limit in Excel increased from 65k to one million and the column limit increased from 256 to 16k. There are better tools to work with data, but these companies’ IT departments aren’t letting users install them.


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