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brauhaus

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Who is using Ollama day-to-day?

3 points·by brauhaus·hace 4 meses·7 comments

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brauhaus
·hace 2 meses·discuss
Every day I'm more glad about EU legislation, that's all I have to say for now
brauhaus
·hace 3 meses·discuss
Even today, I'm still astounded that there are people capable of building a gorgeous and interesting site like this in less than 2 days...
brauhaus
·hace 3 meses·discuss
I went ahead and did it... XP

At the start, I was curious to see if I could. It ended up being a rabbit hole, of course.

I can see some use cases for it. The plan is to dogfood it and validate them.
brauhaus
·hace 4 meses·discuss
I'm curious what the workflow actually looks like for people running Ollama day-to-day.

Do you mostly use it through the terminal, a UI like Open WebUI, or via integrations with other tools?

I’m trying to understand where a browser integration would actually fit - if at all
brauhaus
·hace 6 meses·discuss
Only if the company is headquartered in EU/UK, right? Proton, for example, is headquartered in Switzerland. Even if it wanted, there would be no legal entity in EU to be fined.
brauhaus
·hace 6 meses·discuss
This is not an AI problem, it's an "data privacy + lack of consequences problem". It happens everywhere. I mean, have you ever tried making an airline company to stop sending their shitty miles newsletters?

Only way to stop is to start fining these companies.
brauhaus
·hace 5 años·discuss
The article was not at all what I expected!

I agree that it's hard to gauge the usefulness of applying the best minds to do banal work. After all that the work of making people click on ads is what allowed Google to benefit the world with stuff like Google Maps. But it also created a monopoly: for every Google Maps, there's a Waze left in its wake.

What's truly disheartening about this mercenary culture is not that one can't predict the usefulness of making people click on ads, but that there are so many other tasks which are patently more useful - but whose sponsors have drastically smaller pockets than a FAANG. I'm not talking about lofty projects, like curing cancer and flying to Mars. I'm talking about banal stuff that, at some point of another, affects everyone's. Like trying to navigate a government's website.