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coffeekid

7 karmajoined 5 anni fa

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coffeekid
·6 giorni fa·discuss
Pretty much. Running a local harness calling an llm via APIs doesn't necessarily take a lot of resources. But whatever tasks you want that agent to do via tool calling will be limited by the resources of the machine it runs on if you run those locally, so that's what should inform your choice of specs in this case
coffeekid
·11 mesi fa·discuss
Different use case. Syncthing just keeps folders "in sync" between two machines even if they are not on the same network. Great tool to always have a backup of pictures taken from your phone to a small raspberry pi running at home for instance.
coffeekid
·3 anni fa·discuss
There is no silver bullet for growth. Some people need to actively seek to be more critical, others need to make that criticism more constructive, or be less harsh on themselves.

Have you considered seeing those lines less as the desirable inner monologue of the person, but rather as an exercise to shift that inner monologue to a more positive mindset ?
coffeekid
·4 anni fa·discuss
I was looking for this exact setup a couple months back. I found a system that works for me, though not exactly perfect.

You can use the extension "Simple Tab Groups"[1] to automatically open some domains in specific Firefox containers like you described, by assigning a container to a group, and then configuring a domain to always open in that group.

The downside is that not all groups will be visible at a time, and you'll need to first select your previous group before finding the tab you came from. For me, that's an acceptable downside given the advantages it brings.

[1] - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/simple-tab-gr...
coffeekid
·4 anni fa·discuss
You can also call docker commands by being part of the docker group IIRC.

Doesn't this have more to do with the daemon that the user executing commands ?
coffeekid
·4 anni fa·discuss
Not an expert at all, but here's how I would simplify it. All corrections are welcome!

Docker has two main components. The daemon (you can think of it somewhat like a server) and the client (application you use to run commands).

When you install docker on your machine, it generally installs both. The daemon is a process that runs on your local machine and runs as root.

Rootless refers to the alternative method (used by podman for instance) to run the daemon as a standard user, and delegate root-level tasks to something else, like systemd for instance.