Thank you for your comment. To answer your question, I don’t currently have a public repository where you can see the use cases in action. I only have private product (confidential) repositories that I actually implement the annotations in, and ones where I can see added value. The idea is still new. I am gaining experience in order to determine where and whether it would be beneficial.
Secondly, the specification includes the option to incorporate cross-references (agentref), which would enable you to store references to non-modifiable external repositories. Maybe this could do the trick. With these references, the point is to figure out the detail level at which the ref should point to (repo, folder, file, class) such that it may help the agent.
From my own experience, I can confirm that new users currently can’t just post (or at least I couldn’t). So I’d appreciate it if there were some way to prove you’re not a bot and that you have at least a genuine question or perhaps an interesting post.
Aside from all the debates one can certainly have about Apple in principle, there’s one reason that personally makes working within the Apple ecosystem (iPhone, Mac) a pleasure—it just works! Minimal hassle, an occasional update, and the rest runs smoothly (at least for me).
I made the same observation: podcast - no way, music in foreign language - if in background yes. There are some simple mobile-games out there that work well, e.g. clicking some colours for pattern or something, but also nothing with words, written or spoken. Interestingly, driving a car is also not a problem (at least for me), so in the end i blame identical or different mind-regions processing the input for that :-)