Hey golergka, sorry to hear about Cody slowing down your VS Code. Would you be able to share more info about this? I haven't seen Cody users complain about this in the past, so trying to understand what the potential issue might have been.
Have you tried Cody (https://cody.dev)? Cody has a deep understanding of your codebase and generally does much better at code gen than just one-shotting GPT4 without context.
Companies typically use Carta to manage their cap table, shares, and overall ownership of the company.
This requires a high level of trust as there is a lot of financial information at stake.
Carta seems to be taking this confidential information and is potentially sharing it with other investors and soliciting investors to sell their shares.
Tipping has gotten absurd in the US. I am unironically waiting for the self-checkout machines at grocery stores to start demanding tips.
I still cave and end up tipping almost every time, since it's not the employees fault, but man - going to a frozen yogurt place, preparing everything myself, and having the checkout employee swing the tablet around for a tip always irks me.
I'm pretty sure that it has been the case in 99% of scenarios were consolidation always ended up in a shittier experience for the consumer and employees regardless of the promises the merging companies made.
I don't see how. I haven't played Starfield yet, but from what I've read, all the planets are pretty much the same with a few textures and biomes swapped out and a few random encampments added. You can't even explore the entire planet, just whatever the game engine decides is a planet.
No Man's Sky already did the "trillions of planets" thing, and with that game you could seamlessly go from planet to planet, where in Starfield, it's all loading screens.
Seems like a paid, propped up article, to promote a mediocre game.
Out of the ~3,000 users we have so far, many would fall into the "core creators" category and are finding value. With Video Tap, our focus is allowing them to better focus on video creation, and easily getting other content out of the videos they create.
The primary goal is to repurpose the content. Creating and editing videos takes up a lot of time. If you can create the video once, and get a blog post, promotional materials for it, and other content out of it automatically, it will help you reach a broader audience.
I really don't get the appeal of Temu. I checked it out a while back and it's literally the lowest quality garbage at the lowest price possible. I was curious enough to see what I'd receive if I bought anything from them and spent like $10 on 7-8 products. They did arrive within 2 weeks but were absolute garbage that went straight into the recycling bin.
Nothing wrong with this imo. I actually hope more open source projects start with a business source license if their ultimate goal is to become a SaaS platform.
I think we've seen time and time again large enterprises abusing the spirit of open source for their own monetary gain, contributing nothing back, and just acting in bad faith.
I think early on in AirBnB's existence I've had the delightful experience, interesting hosts, etc.
The last 2-3 years though, it has been less than stellar with both super host and non-super hosts stays for a majority of the stays, so I stopped using AirBnB. I'm sure there are still a lot of hosts that have a property they treat properly, treat the guests good, and care about hospitality etc. but the general vibe I get is that a lot of superhosts are folks with a bunch of properties doing the bare minimum while charging the absolute maximum. Just personal experience in the US though.
AirBnB hosts are unrealistic with their expectations. The raising costs, ridiculous cleaning fees, absurd "house rules", etc. make AirBnB pretty much a no-go for me these days.
Hotels have great amenities, really good customer support, and not too much BS.
With AirBnB it's an absolute gamble if you're going to get a good host or a wannabe slumlord. I don't think this is AirBnB's fault though, just general human greed, wanting to make easy money by providing as little value as possible.
I'm not saying anyones opinion is incorrect. FSD may work better in some places and worse in others. But I live in Las Vegas. We have wide roads, both highways and regular roads well maintained, great weather, and other elements that would make you think FSD would work great.
In my experience, it does lane keeping great and going in a straight line, slowing down for traffic. But that's about it. Making turns, the overall jank is unbearable in person (it doesn't come off as bad on video, but as a driver or passenger, getting constantly tossed around is not fun), and also just the unpredictability of the system makes it unusable for anything more than a parlor trick.
You're free to have your own opinion or listen to whoever you want, but I can tell you my experience has been consistently terrible and hasn't improved by any meaningful amount over the last 18 months.
Feel free to email me at [email protected] if you'd prefer.