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I d like to hear more about people who have jumped onto large codebases and were instantly productive. I see a lot of emphasis on documentation and comments, but in my experience they get stale real fast.

Just uninstalled the app and canceled subscription. OpenAI can't justify their insane valuation without an user base. Especially when there are capable models elsewhere.

People exist to prop up massive shareholder value and justify insane capex.

Right. How many people actually want a remotely monitored robot collecting personal data, that will likely also require a hefty monthly subscription?

And he's talking about an eventual price point of $30K a robot. So a bit high for early adopter middle class folks who are just curious.

I think it proves that you could have valid criticisms about the viability of the product but markets are often irrational. Bitcoin is probably the most blatant example, a product which has close to zero utility but is currently has a market cap of 1 point something trillion.

I have seen this post before. I don't know what exactly they do, but that's an extraordinary list of products to be managing. I hope they are making enough revenue to cover those outrageous costs.

That's not how you do charity. Let me mansplain how it's done.

This is exactly the kind of AI innovation I d expect from Meta.

Profiting of teenage girl insecurities was just not doing it anymore.


My personal experience with using Slack as just a in-company chat app has been fine. I enjoy using Slack more than Teams or Discord.

All their integrations kinda suck though, and its not uncommon for integrations to randomly break with no discernible changes elsewhere.


> I enjoy using Slack more than Teams or Discord.

Surely we can raise the bar for team chat out of hell....


I hate how Slack has no syntax highlighting for code blocks. Even Discord has it.


On the desktop, you can share snippets, but this is not inline.


We used to have a local devs slack and any time someone came up with a random slash command one guy would add a new php script to power that command. I assume a lot of it is just an abandoned API that nobody cares about anymore because Microsoft forced Teams into Office so it took over corporate America in waves. I cant remember the last place I worked at that didnt just use Teams.


Speaking of php slack was built with php until they followed Facebook with Hack (which is essentially a modern flavor of php)


Its a solid success if you squint just at the adoption numbers they achieved by cross selling it.


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