Something that has worked surprisingly well for me is journaling via voice recording on my phone. It's been so effective that I've mapped it to my phone's physical shortcut button.
I have struggled with on-and-off sleep issues for a while, and I'll admit I don't always follow perfect sleep hygiene. But there is something about dumping my thoughts out loud that completely shuts down the repetitive, circular thinking that usually keeps me awake.
Groq was the preview of the broadband era of LLMs for me. I remember asking a question on the demo site and the answer text showed up near instantly. Far faster than I could read. This was ~1 year ago and pre-acquisition.
It wouldn't continue in any real form. Maybe cholesterol conscious and devout buddhists will still try to adhere, but beyond that I don't see what the point would be.
It would be like how Ozempic lead to a mysterious quieting of Body Positivity/Health at Every Size advocates. They were a vocal minority, there was much "debate" and cri de couer from many sides and now its all evaporated without a farewell or explicit winding down.
Echoing that. 99 Bottles really was an institution. It had the feel of a proper local pub: warm, a little scruffy, and full of character. The walls were covered with bottle caps from all kinds of beer brands — probably more than 99, honestly.
And if you made it through all 99 beers on their list, you got a small plaque on the wall, about the size of one of those e-ink grocery price tags. It was a great tavern-like atmosphere, and the kind of place that felt increasingly rare even before it was gone.
I want to use local LLMs, and in fact I have enough VRAM (12GB) and RAM (96GB) to do it but I gave up because it was pretty buggy with the Gemma 4 26B (A4B?) Q4 models. It also meant I had to give up local voice transcription because I needed all my VRAM dedicated to the LLM.
The other thing is I will ask an agent via Telegram to code stuff, so I want an agent that is smart enough to do it all. I prefer brute forcing with money right now. I hate when LLM make bizarre mistakes, I end up spending way too much time figuring out the issue.
I use Openrouter, so hopefully no one has built a perfect replica of me in their storage. I flip between models too.
But to be clear, I am living dangerously with agentic workflows in general. Haven't been burnt yet (other than accidentally running up a huge Gemini bill which made me switch to Codex Oauth and Openrouter for cheap Minimax 2.7)
I am moving to a commander/orchestrator model to use both frontier and cheap models and eventually a better local LLM once I buy a 5070 Ti, 3090, 64GB Mac M1 Max, 128GB Strix Halo (probably missed that train) or the AMD R9700.
But you can turn off brain. Try make self idiot. Save brain energy for important.
Smarty speaks in idiot. When smarty speak like that is consistent. Idiot understand fast.
It would have been hilarious if the author spoke like a caveman in his video or had a section in that article where he explained his conclusions like a caveman.
I use my Openclaw setup to record notes I don't ever want to remember the details of. Here are some examples:
Storing my Health Insurance's Member ID, RxBin and other data.
Recording the serial number of a product I will be calling technical support for.
Organizing files to be more logical and deduplicating or consolidating as needed.
Whenever I want this info, I'll just ask my LLM to pull it up.
Local isn't viable yet on an economic basis, API costs are so low that you're better off taking advantage of the bonanza. As local models become more performant, so too will the ability of providers via Openrouter be able to offer them cheaper than your likely payoff period for a $4K Mac Studio 128GB. e.g Gemma 4 31B is impressive, but it costs practically nothing via Openrouter. Given that there are a ton of providers for open models, I doubt there's any subsidy going on because the providers are faceless and interchangeable.
At least, that's my theory.
The big advantages of local on a business level are:
- Freezing your model's exact settings once you've locked in some kind of workflow that works just fine.
- Guarding against insane token usage from LLMs who have been told to never stop until they figure out the solution OR setting up an LLM run incorrectly. (The last one happened to me with Gemini 3.1 Pro)
- PII or some need for on-premise only LLMs.
I frequently use AI to make my comments more concise and easy to follow. I find myself meandering a lot when I type, and now that I've transitioned to full voice dictation through FUTO keyboard I am speaking more off the cuff and having an LLM clean it up.
You may also notice that I don't have much common history here. I mostly comment on Reddit.
Here's where I draw the line. If you are not reading the text that is produced by the LLM, then I don't want to read whatever it is that you wrote. I will usually only do one or two iterations of my comment, but afterwards I will usually edit it by hand.
Technically, there is light AI editing of this comment because FUTO keyboard has the ability to enable a transformer model that will capitalize, punctuate, and just generally remove filler words and make it so that it's not a hyper-literal transcription.
Why not just change your wifi password so that the TV can't connect again (after you've got your OTAs but I guess you could have loaded them on a USB stick to flash instead of wifi)
iOS now has a ton of dialogs and set up steps and the occasional dark pattern in selling you various cloud based subscriptions to Apples various services.
Having said all that, yes Android is pretty bad. I think it's the in the nature of platform owners to get their hooks into yoh as much as possible.
I have struggled with on-and-off sleep issues for a while, and I'll admit I don't always follow perfect sleep hygiene. But there is something about dumping my thoughts out loud that completely shuts down the repetitive, circular thinking that usually keeps me awake.