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I would hazard a guess that it's because there's been many debates about contributing PRs that might be perceived as AI slop. Not saying that's the case here, but it's possible the fix might be a poor one, not follow the project's guidelines, or one which the contributor doesn't fully understand, but doesn't care because it fixed the issue. I would guess the better approach would be to submit a bug report with the same information the LLM used, and maybe suggest there the fix the LLM provided. Unless this really was a tiny patch and none of the above concerns applied.


Whose "they"? Private sites do a phenomenal job at preserving a large amount of rare content.


what's the point if no one can see it


The prompt processing times I've heard about have put me off wanting to go that high with memory on the M series (hoping that changes for the M5 series though). What's the average and longest times you've had to wait when using opencode? Has any improvements to mlx helped in that regard?


The M5 ultra series is supposed to have some big gains around prompt processing - something like 3-4x from what I've read. I'm tempted to swap out my m4 mini that I'm using for this kind of stuff right now!


Now with even more significance that Amanda Askell has confirmed it is based on a document they trained Claude on (https://x.com/AmandaAskell/status/1995610567923695633).


> These relationships were robust after adjusting for established risk factors for cardiovascular health, including physical activity, smoking, alcohol, diet, sleep duration, socioeconomic status, and polygenic risk.

There's more details further in the article[1].

[1] https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.06.20.25329961v...


It's so subtle I've for a long time wondered if it's something most people experience and don't notice, or they assume is normal, just because unless I think about it I don't really notice it either. I have been known to focus on details more than others do. Not sure if this contributes to my seemingly heightened sense of smell as well. But not being able to experience what others experience, makes me wonder if I'll ever know.


I always thought that was just blood flow in the ears. Would make sense if that would cause _some_ noise.


>It's so subtle I've for a long time wondered if it's something most people experience and don't notice, or they assume is normal

I wondered this myself too. One thing I do know is nobody was able to relate from friends and family when mentioning this. Visual snow syndrome (which according to affected people online can be very disabling) was only first described as late as 2015 according to wikipedia. So we may never know at this pace.


Seeing the GitHub link made me assume for a second this was open source, which it's disappointingly not. The LLM search is interesting, but it's not interesting enough for me when there's already an open source full text history extension that I've been using https://github.com/iansinnott/full-text-tabs-forever


> On one hand, understandable; on the other, again, the software is effectively useless because of this.

Just in case you didn't already know, you can use Flatseal[1] to add the symlinked paths outside of those in the default whitelisted paths.

I think it's a good thing Flatpak have followed a security permissions system similar to Android, as I think it's great for security, but I definitely think they need to make this process more integrated and user friendly.

[1] https://flathub.org/apps/com.github.tchx84.Flatseal


I can change those permission directly in the KDE settings, with the need to download flatseal, others DE need to implement their own


It's a shame then that Google are moving away from ChromeOS in favor of Android. This also explains the improvements to desktop mode in the latest Android betas.


First, a disclaimer: I also overwhelmingly prefer ChromeOS over Android for a bunch of reasons and wish that if they had to merge them the result was a thin Android compatibility layer on the much more robust bones of ChromeOS.

That said... if Google wants to fold ChromeOS into Android, I think they'll have to make Android fully supported on x86 as a first-class platform (because most Chromebooks are x86). And if they do that, they should have little problem making a... Android Flex or whatever you'd call it that boots on normal PC hardware just like ChromeOS Flex does today and fills the same role.


Asus and other OEMs have had Android tablets on x86 for quite some time.

In any case, except for shared objects written with the NDK, the actual CPU hardly matters, even across ARM there is enough variation.


Manythings like network/Bluetooth/Display server stack are better optimised in android. Low power long battery life.

If similar to ChromeOS it is directly updated by Google then it will be a huge win for all computer users. No pain from OEM. I mean some Gemini crap from Google but that is tolerable.


I think it's unfortunate given the audience I imagine will make up most of its purchases. For example, the NBN in Australia just announced earlier this year it's first 2 Gbps residential plans (previously 1 Gbps being the maximum) planned for availability some time next year[1].

[1] https://www.nbnco.com.au/corporate-information/media-centre/...


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