I have the Studio Display and personally find the larger and uniform bezel gives it a premium esthetic and unique look. A smaller bezel would inevitably draw comparison with cheaper monitors.
It seems like an intentional design decision that is rooted in better UX. It's certainly easier to position with your thumbs on the bezels, and provides a surface to attach post-it notes.
In their own marketing they show several of these monitors being used side by side and bill their computers as supporting multiple of these displays. I don’t recall them ever showing a monitor adjustment.
The billions in agricultural subsidies, strict regulations, and non-tariff barriers that make it difficult for non-EU companies to compete suggest otherwise to me.
Actually, a lot of these pejoratives are from the 19th century. By the 17th century, the word "Dutch" had begun to solidify its meaning around the Netherlands.
This mainly stems from a time when tensions between the British and Dutch were at their peak, due to competition.
For me babylonjs was a bit of a leap forward. Great engine + tooling. Nice documentation with tons of examples for how to do things. Besides that, experiment lots and lots! Be very curious. And don't be afraid of 3D math.
Thanks! Congrats on making it to the end.
This is too broad a topic to cover here, but I'd say the most valuable skill is the ability to constantly learn new tools and techniques.
On the subject of Google nagware, the most egregious one to me is trying to use Google on iOS safari without logging in. It repeatedly runs a popup that covers >65% of the screen asking you to sign in.
Not trying to be dismissive of Mistral, but I bet that's a large driving force behind the effort. Usually I'd prefer to focus on the technical aspects, but with the undeniable geopolitical impact of technology/AI, I think it necessitates a discussion.
The first two are seemingly of questionable utility, but the 3rd feature (Help me write) is actually quite interesting.
As of late, most of my public written responses (bar HN) have had some sort of collaboration with ChatGPT, and I've often wondered about a native browser integration. For those of us who struggle with communication, this is an exciting prospect!
Ironically, the message "I'm interested in this place - do you allow dogs?" is a piece of decent business writing on its own and way better than anything I saw while trying to sublet a room. I would rather see AI suggest phrases like that rather than their proposed answer.
Now that I think about it, a Clippy that interviews you about needs and follows your browsing session to highlight stuff you like / don't like and propose questions to ask would be pretty sweet.
I don't know. The screenshot that they use to showcase it makes me feel the opposite - it took a perfectly clear and concise question and dressed it up in a lot of unnecessary verbiage that the person on the other end will now have to unpack to get to the gist of it.
Or they could use an LLM to translate it back to clear and concise, I suppose. But then what is it even for?
I'm on the other end of the spectrum; I'm pretty worried that that feature will make it really easy to automate bot comments in-browser. It's sad that the internet as we knew it 3 years ago is gone forever and changes like this to push some team's OKRs means I won't be able to trust more online comments.
I suck at plenty of things and when there is software (or another tool) to help me, I am happy to use it. Software that helps with communication, at least on this level, is a new frontier and therefore, as always, people feel a lot of uncertainty.
As someone who seriously utilizes this particular tool, what do you think of those issues? For example, do you feel like the result has your own voice? Your own specific, precise thoughts? Does it help or hurt growth in communication skill? How do those things play out in real application of the technology and what is the best way to use it?
Incidentally, communication is a strong point for me and therefore ChatGPT doesn't benefit me much in that respect. I hate to think that my skill has lost most of its value, but working in technology, I can hardly complain when it happens to me: Are communication skills even needed now, or how has that need changed?
The uncertainty you pointed out does seem to explain the downvotes I received.
For me personally, communication is arduous. I struggle daily to articulate what I want to say in a logical and efficient manner, let alone in a graceful or artistic one. I've noticed my vocabulary and communication skill has regressed as I get older, despite efforts to improve it.
Overall, ChatGPT has helped tremendously. I never had a written communication style that I was proud of, so I'm happy to assume its more generic tone of voice. If language fulfills its primary purpose, to get a point across, that's enough for me. Any kind of inherent artistic integrity is above my pay grade, so to speak.
I find it the exact opposite. Writing is joyful to me, whether I'm writing a short one-paragraph comment on HN or writing a thousand-word essay. I do not like the current crop of "Help me write" features because they take away the joy.
I see this may be a good replacement for general autofill features as well. Seemingly simple autofill tasks like filling e-mail, address, name, country etc... fields never "just works" for almost all sites since this relies on correctness of the target page implementation and devs usually never care of it. Large language models should be better on this task.
I have a chrome extension (https://github.com/SMUsamaShah/LookupChatGPT) where i just added in-place text replacement option. Right click your selected text and chose your own prompt to refine the text your way.
Is there any good AI autocomplete tool out there? The only LLM tool I like currently is GitHub copilot. I basically want copilot for gmail + MS word, but every product I've found wants me to prompt an AI.
I also find the UX much better than typical LLMs that require you to write a prompt first; it simply suggests continuations of your sentences that you can accept or ignore, without requiring you to switch your mind between writing for your intended email recipient and writing a prompt for the LLM.
The ability to screen emails and approve new senders has been a game changer for me. I've managed to cut down on noise and actually hit Inbox Zero for the first time.
The spam protection isn't great, it relies on proprietary APIs, and I'm not super excited about the other features, but I'm sticking with Hey just for the screening feature.