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modo_

196 声望加入于 14年前
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[我的公钥:https://keybase.io/thoma;我的证明:https://keybase.io/thoma/sigs/nIlV6UddrFQcH2J5sfe0DVEKBFYWZKFnSTnD1ZbbiUI]

评论

modo_
·4天前·讨论
当 Context 还是 Brand.dev 时,我就开始使用它了。我发现它是一个很棒的产品 - 那些罕见的 API 之一,它立即使我遇到的问题消失了。注册后一小时内即可投入生产

代理需要来自网络的干净/当前上下文,这是我发现的向他们提供这些信息的最佳方式。互联网显然正在朝这个方向发展:公司开始意识到他们的网站需要对代理商来说清晰可见。有些人已经在适应,但许多人还没有。背景感觉像是这一转变的重要组成部分

叶海亚是一位伟大的建设者。他的扩张速度令人印象深刻,很高兴看到他将 Context 带到哪里。
modo_
·28天前·讨论
Exactly right. Climbers care a lot about the ethics of an ascent. It’s interesting how much those ethics have changed over the history of the sport.

One of the core ideas is that later climbers should respect or improve upon the style of the first ascensionist. e.g. if a climb was first done using siege tactics, then doing it in a single day is celebrated. But making a climb easier or safer after the fact is much more controversial, because it can feel like changing the nature of the route itself.

Snake Dike is a good example that’s flared up recently in the climbing world. It’s a classic, relatively easy route up Half Dome, and many climbers free solo it. But because it’s a face climb, protection mostly comes from bolts drilled into the rock. The first ascensionist placed very few bolts, which left long runouts and real consequences if you fall.

To many old school climbers, adding bolts to Snake Dike is disrespectful because the risk is part of the route’s character. Their view is basically: don’t bring the mountain down to your level. The new generation of climbers don’t seem to feel that way at all - they think you shouldn’t have to take unnecessary risk to climb a classic route.

https://gripped.com/news/first-ascentionist-pushes-back-on-h...
modo_
·2个月前·讨论
I like this - I think you're not too far off of what's popular these days though. I think similar functionality can be achieved by using the "hook" functionality in claude code / codex.
modo_
·7年前·讨论
I use a bike to get around SF the majority of the time as well. But lately I've been switching it up and using a skateboard for short trips. Riding the bike definitely isn't 'impractical', but the skateboard is so much less of a hassle.

You don't have to bother carrying a lock (or walk to the corner to find the nearest pole to lock it to for that matter). And, don't tell my Mom, but not fiddling with a helmet and lights is huge too.