Many Chinese users actually hate this feature because of how it's designed. There's a mandatory pop-up upon the first launch of every app to ask for your choice, which can be clumsy if you're setting up a new device. If you tap the wrong option (which is common since the dialog is small and crowded), you have to go deep into system settings to restore internet access. Moreover, many foreign app developers know nothing of this and have their apps throw an error even before a Chinese user has the chance to give permission, forcing them to manually kill and reopen the app to be online, adding to the errands.
Great project. It’s a surprise to learn that it’s possible to make it to #598 with three posts.
(I’m not sure why the data from my old domain, cyhsu.xyz, hasn’t been aggregated to the new hsu.cy, despite the methodology page saying it should. Must I return the canonical header in addition to a 301 code?)
It was also during the past year that I came to realize how powerful and versatile Hugo is. I had used Hugo for many years, touching only the most basic feature set. Last year, I decided to be done with Twitter and Instagram and make my own timelines of text and photo posts with similar layouts. Initially, I thought it might require separate instances of GoToSocial and Pixelfed. It turned out that Hugo could do it all with a few tweaks, and now they are live at hsu.cy/notes and hsu.cy/gallery, respectively. I highly recommend it to everyone who wants to start their own blog.
I appreciate his work for being more informative and organized than average AI-related content. Without his blogging, it would be a struggle to navigate the bombastic and narcissistic Twitter/Reddit posts for AI updates. The barrier to entry for AI reporting is so low that you just need to give a bit more care to be distinguished, and he is getting the deserved attention for doing exactly that in a systematical and disciplined manner. (I do believe many on HN are more than capable but not interested in doing the same.) Personally, I sometimes find his posts more congratulatory or trivial than I like, but I have learned to take what I want and ignore what I don’t.