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Mentioned elsewhere, but

:term claude

In a split goes a long way for me!


Ymmv, but I have been very happy using classic vim’s “native claude support”

:term claude

It will also expand special characters so you can do something like

:term claude “refactor %”

And Claude starts work on your current file right away. Also your buffers will update with Claude’s edits!


According to this, notifications are possible if you add the app to the home screen, which I didn't know.

A feature more devs should use- I've been surprised how much websites behave like native apps if you just "add to homescreen" instead of downloading an official app, e.g. twitter, instagram.

When you open the shortcut, it doesn't launch as a tab in safari, but appears independently in the app switcher. They are often indistinguishable from official apps!

Seems like a great way for devs to avoid app store pains


This experience is exactly why PWAs could be great.


Not sure about the ssd in particular but the neo is apparently pretty modular

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5k7Lv7f-5CQ


Fantastic tear down. Thank you. Amazing for Apple. I hope this is the trend going forward but probably not. But still a gazillion screws? I just replaced the keyboard for my old hp elitebook with two screws.


I don't care about a gazillion screws, if it's serviceable in the End.

If Apple would build their laptops serviceable like ThinkPads I would buy one today.


It seems like they’re starting to learn the cost of being too integrated.

They’ve slowly been moving towards making it easier to repair individual broken parts. I’m very happy to see that a new keyboard doesn’t require replacing the entire top case. That was just crazy.


Another crazy one is SectorLISP, 223 lines of asm

https://justine.lol/sectorlisp2/


fwiw there are more granular controls, where you can for example allow/deny specific bash commands, read or write access to specific files, using a glob syntax:

https://code.claude.com/docs/en/settings#permission-settings

You can configure it at the project level


Yes, those permissions stick with the project in the settings file. I'd like those same permissions, but configurable per-session / context.


Does this mean I get to take a cut for assisting their training data?


> Does this mean I get to take a cut for assisting their training data?

No. You see, the money is supposed to go to Altman.


Earlier this year moving home to Canada, instead of flying I bought a van in California and drove it back with all my stuff.

I was taken aback to learn my dad did the exact same thing at my age!


Any particular reason for moving back to Canada ?


Yes, it was configured in his mRNA


I think part of the message is that speed isn't a free lunch. If an intelligence can solve "legible" problems quickly, it's symptomatic of a specific adaption for identifying short paths.

So when you factor speed into tests, you're systematically filtering for intelligences that are biased to avoid novelty. Then if someone is slow to solve the same problems, it's actually a signal that they have the opposite bias, to consider more paths.

IMO the thing being measured by intelligence tests is something closer to "power" or "competitive advantage".


> Then if someone is slow to solve the same problems, it's actually a signal that they have the opposite bias, to consider more paths.

No this isn't true, most of the time they just don't consider any paths at all and are just dumb.

And the bias towards novelty doesn't make you slow, ADHD is biased towards novelty and people wouldn't call those slow.


What I meant is, assuming that they do find solutions. If they're not doing anything of course that's different.

In the article, "speed" is about reaching specific answers in a specific window of time, the bane of ADHD.


I think what you're describing is a form of conflict aversion, where the (tiny) conflict is what would clear up your read, or the group's attitude on something, for going forward. Short sighted kindness is a nice way to put it


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