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imoreno

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imoreno
·पिछला माह·discuss
Don't Anthropic and OpenAI both offer the same thing built in? What are the difference with this service?
imoreno
·पिछला माह·discuss
>they do not want to pay a subscription.

This is wrong in 2026. Lots of people want to pay. See: TFA

What they don't want is and _still_ see ads, get hassled by needy marketing emails. See: TFA

If you're saying "we're gonna show you ads and datamine you because you're getting it free", then when I do pay, you have to take that stuff out. Try to have your cake and eat it too = sub canceled, adblock on, ad nauseam enabled.
imoreno
·4 माह पहले·discuss
That's how it has to be. Volunteer community doesn't have the bandwidth to make everything maximally user friendly. Users have to do their share too, by accepting the responsibility to learn about their system. Otherwise the model isn't feasible. If you want an appliance experience where you have zero responsibility as a user, you can go to the commercial vendor, but they will also have power over you and abuse it.

Linux is indeed for people who can love linux. For people who don't like computers, there's basically no solution.
imoreno
·6 माह पहले·discuss
There's a spectrum of writing, corresponding to supply/demand or push/pull. The article is giving advice for oversupplied writing, where the audience doesn't really want to hear you, and you're trying to badger it into reading it anyway - typically, for some sort of personal gain (getting an interview, making a sale, promoting a political cause). Yes, attention hacking is important in this case.

There is also a writing where people are looking for the information, and they are showing up at your door because they already care. Presumably you wrote, because you saw the open question, and want to try answering it. History books, encyclopedias, classic literature by dead people, falls under this. Ironically, so does the example of Venice - you would read about Venice if you were already curious; there is little profit in "making someone care" about Venice otherwise. An attention grabby style would be forced and counterproductive in this.
imoreno
·पिछला वर्ष·discuss
>your access to healthcare is directly tied to your enthusiasm for the company mission

No, it's not. First, they're legally required to provide it so long as you work there, whether you're enthusiastic or not. Even if you got fired for not being enthusiastic enough, by law you can stay on the same health insurance plan for 18 months. If you still haven't found a job after 18-36 months, or just don't like the company's plan, you can get your own individual plan, or look for a plan for low-income people like medicaid.

The US healthcare system has its problems for sure, but you seem confused about what they are.