Putting the power and the data of the users in the hands of the users themselves! Well done. Getting it setup was easy. Wish the app recognized the keyboard and realized when it was displayed so the bottom menu and chat box weren't hidden under it.
Can't help but feel the author hasn't actually vibe coded with Claude Code or Gemini CLI. Had a simple need for an GUI desktop app to package up folders of documents and produce an inventory sheet of what was in the folder and a companion archive of the folder. Should be as simple as a user dragging and dropping the folder onto the app. 5 minutes with "vibe coding" and a working app existed. I looked through the code and it was clean, effective, and minimal enough while maintaining human readability. It's a tool to solve some problems. Not a tool to solve all problems. And the vibe coding of today is so much different (better) than that of even 6 months ago.
Being removed from a 6-week program that requires participants to quit their job for missing a 90min meeting that occurred at 7am is insanely hostile and unfriendly. They showed their colors and they aren't helpful friendly people that encourage learning.
Actually, you could keep all the pieces mixed up in a giant bin. That's what we do. As my daughter said, "the fun is in finding just the piece you need"
You clearly haven't invested in PC gaming because your vision of how it would play out is quite misguided.
I play exclusively on the PC, and only update the majority of hardware (CPU, RAM, motherboard) every 7ish years. GPU about every 4 to 5 years. When a system is first built, enjoy the new AAA games on "ultra" settings, and lower settings on new games do that at 5 years you're picking "medium" or "low" for quality settings.
80 hours for 2 games? Most gamers log hundreds of hours into a game over a year, not 40. Games like fortnight, pubg, destiny 2, far cry, sky rim, Witcher 3, etc, can easily rack up several hundred hours of play thanks to exploration of deep content or multiplayer modes.
If I do the math, it's a few cents per hour of entrainment. Much cheaper than any other venue. Even hiking at the local forest preserves charge more money for bringing in a car and parking.
https://pi-hole.net/ is a project to consider for home and small business networks that you're looking to protect via DNS without sending all your requests to a third party.
Your requests are still forwarded to a third party with a Pi-hole. They are sometimes cached and sites you have blocked do not resolve, but choosing a DNS provider is still required.
Only non-cached requests go to a third party. And I don’t think there’s an easy way to prevent this unless you get a hold of all the zone files and copy in bulk.
What’s nice about pi-hole is that you get one request to sites like google.com until the record expires in the cache. If you use 8.8.8.8 as your dns you might end up requesting the same domain name a bunch of times depending on how your client caches and the caching is at 8.8.8.8. So dns will see lots of requests to the same domain.
In a network of just a few computers, are there really that many cached requests? Local DNS caches will already cache short term and TTL of most domains is probably too short to get much caching beyond that.
Looking at my dnsmasq statistics, only 16.3% of 10,776 queries in the last 24 hours have been answered by the cache. Another 21.7% never left the device, since they were in the block lists, but that still leaves 62.0% of queries to be returned by 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1, which is my external DNS provider.
Although this doesn’t count on-client caching, it still seems to back up your guess and my original comment.
Pretty sure gaining an understanding of technology is more beneficial than licking the floor. Besides, parenting allows the parents to say, "let's sit and play word games together in your tablet." My 5yo loves playing in the tablet, and it's not used as a baby sitter. Either we do it together, or she plays the simpler games (colors, letters, numbers) with her younger sister. Teaching and explaining to others is a beneficial skill as well. Being on a tablet, does not necessitate that it be antisocial.
It's better than indicated in GP, but as an indicator of how good modern CPUs are in comparison to older ones, this page page overstates the case. The older CPU is 4-core but 8-thread (hyperthreads), the newer one is 8-core and 8-thread (no hyperthreads). The multi-core benchmarks are much higher for the newer CPU because it has twice as many cores, so that is inflating the overall score quite a bit. That said, it's not as simple as halving that score, as hyperthreads don't scale quite the same way, so it depends on how the multi-core test is formulated.
Edit: Oh, wow, as taspeotis points out it's not even the same two CPUs in the original Intel Ark comparison (which I was working off of from memory when noting cores and threads). The i9-9700k is actually an 8-core and 16-thread (hyperthreads) CPU, so it is actually literally twice as many cores and threads. It's still better performance, but not nearly as lopsided as it even seemed before, given those resources.
I honestly don't get why people recommend cmder. It's really slow, even compared to the slower terminals on Linux. Also, and more importantly, xterm emulation seems to be utterly broken. I get weird incorrect lines shown all the time.
I found the WSL console to be a at least a bit more reliable.
Also don't underestimate our willingness to try and make our inbox stuff better - it just takes a lot of time to add new features without breaking some back-compat. We're hard at work improving conhost every day :)
I actually just installed that before you mentioned it, and disabled its sound in the volume mixer. Finally something I can live with in terms of terminal.
It's been a while since I visited them. Used to get popups and redirects. If not pushing malware, was certainly pushing unwanted software. That ruined their brand forever for me.