> It seems like, by default, you are stuck with whatever level of resourcefulness you brought to a problem the first time you encountered it and failed to fix it.
Since I assume you would be interested to know, this quote seems almost certainly misattributed to Einstein and seems to have been made up by Ram Dass [1]. Though I would be happy to be proved wrong if you have a source
Interesting! Yeah, there appears to be a lot of discussion on the topic. My source indicating Einstein was no better. However, happy to attribute it to Ram Dass and/or Einstein, both were brilliant.
Thanks! This was my wife's idea and I thought it's interesting but was skeptical at first. But after we started using it, it actually helped a lot! Much less whining/crying and a lot less stressful for my wife and I
So at least it works for my family, and just like you said, it's a huge win by itself :)
It's fascinating how you've turned a personal challenge into a solution that could help many families! The reduction in stress and whining is a huge win—every parent I know would love that. I'm curious about how the kids responded initially to the photo proof feature—did they find it fun or just another chore? Also, have you considered expanding the app for other routine-based needs, like homework or chores, to make it even more versatile?
Is the goal to make a “universal MCP” that makes it easy to let MCP clients execute thousands of tools on a session by session basis? Or is it more focused on initial tool discovery and registration? If it’s the former, does the process add more latency between user taking action and tool getting executed?
Yes it is the former. The value comes from its progressive guidance during a task, not just in the initial setup.
As for latency, we optimized for that. For examples, Strata automatically uses a direct, flat approach for simple cases. And we use less tokens compared to official MCP servers as well, as shown in the benchmark.
We tested our approaches with several thousand tools and it is working pretty well. Also we provide API access as well, so any developer can use this, not just on Microsoft or VS Code.
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The sensor has a small thread that is completely painless actually! Not invasive at all. Beside the small device stuck to the skin, you cannot tell you have the sensor on at all.
I’m curious about this sentiment. Why would living in a place be condoning the international political actions of said place? If I move to Spain, I don’t automatically condone the government there. There are many reasons to live in a place, and politics is only one (hopefully less important than doing what’s right for family, job opportunities, etc).
Perhaps OP is suggesting the current events are bad enough to warrant leaving? Genuinely curious.
>Why would living in a place be condoning the international political actions of said place?
If you're a foreigner living and working in the USA you're funding their government via taxes, helping their economy with your labour, etc. Basically, you are aiding the enemy.
Would any of these be problematic for you? The US withdrawing from NATO, behaving in an adversarial way to your home country/Europe? Allying with Russia over Europe?
Brilliant.
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