The Rivian R2 makes Tesla’s look old and Android like. It’s very slick. The only thing I miss vs CarPlay is the voice Apple Maps uses, which is more natural.
The screen cut ins, typographic headlights, and crystal scroller wheels scream "teenager escaped room due to Bitcoin". BMW has many timeless designs to pull from in the last 30-40 years, but chose to pass the mature confident adult torch to the likes of Volvo and Rivian...
Nicely conceived! This is the kind of feature Apple ought to have already delivered with on device models and private cloud compute.
Sending many whole screenshots to an indie mystery box, though, should be a non-starter for anyone without the skills to verify what any given update to this app is doing. Your website's featured use case highlights the risks (to you and users) unintentionally well: "How do I export my passwords?" (I did a double take: was this performance art from The Onion?) If a user opens a plain text file of secrets without closing this app/the help task, what gets captured, sent over the network, and saved to disk? What protections exist for, say, a computer-challenged elderly person's banking details?
A suggestion about the FAQ ...
"Where is my task history stored? Is it private?
Your privacy is our top priority. Your task history is stored securely and encrypted on your local machine by default. You have full control over your data."
... This invites unanswered questions about what exactly from the screenshots is stored, for how long, and what design backs the "securely" claim. Being up front about this would invite trust and helpful developer feedback.
For an academic coffee paper, it is better than many.
A common sin remains: like most coffee papers, I was unable to find calibration procedures in the methods or supplementary sections for the espresso brewing instrument whose performance may vary between runs, days, or users. In this case, they claim/assume "The Opera allows for precise control of shot time, water pressure (PW), and temperature"). As a Decent owner, I'm less familiar with the Opera, but for either machine I would want to disprove any confounding variables by attaching independent sensors. Decent has openly discussed hurdles they've confronted for consistency and accurate measurement.
Their main takeaways, though, are interesting and track with how many now prefer to extract:
As we demonstrated in Figure 3, our model informs us that a reduction in dry coffee mass results in an increased EYmax (shown schematically in blue in Figure 6). Thus, a barista is able to achieve highly reproducible espresso with the same EY as the 20 g espresso by reducing the coffee mass to 15 g and counter-intuitively grinding much coarser (as shown in red, Figure 6B). This modification may result in very fast shots (<15 s), a reduction in espresso concentration, and a different flavor profile.
...
Beyond sensory science studies, a persistent difficulty is that there is no rapid route
to assessing the quality of two identical EYs made with different grind settings or
brew parameters. It is clear that espresso made at 22% EY in the partially clogged
regime tastes more ‘‘complex’’ than a fast 22% EY obtained using the optimization
routine presented in Figure 6. In an attempt to recover the same flavor profile as
the partially clogged flow regime, a shot must contain a mixture of higher and lower
extractions. Consider the tasty point in Figure 7: One can approximate its flavor pro-
file by blending two shots: (1) a low extraction/high dose (purple point) and (2) a high
extraction/low dose (green point). This procedure can more economically yield a
shot with a flavor profile that should approximate that which was previously only
obtainable in an economically inefficient partially clogged shot. Blending shots
does double the total volume of the beverage, and the procedure comes with the
added combinatorial complexity associated with calibrating two shots that, when
mixed together, yield superior flavor. We expect only the most enthusiastic practi-
tioners would consider this approach, but it may well be actionable in an industrial
setting where extraction is carried out in bulk.