What has gotten worse without AI? I don't think writing or coding is inherently harder. Google search may be worse but I've heard Kagi is still pretty great. Apple Intelligence feels like it's easy to get rid of on their platforms, for better and worse. If you're using Windows that might get annoying, personally I just use LTSC.
The skills of writing and coding atrophy when replaced by generative AI. The more we use AI to do thinking in some domain, the less we will be able to do that thinking ourselves. It's not a perfect analogy for car infrastructure.
Yeah Kagi is good, but the web is increasingly dogshit, so if you're searching in a space where you don't already have trusted domains for high quality results, you may just end up being unable to find anything reliable even with a good engine.
I actually don't think there's anything wrong with horizontal scrollbars, as long as you're using an input device (like an Apple trackpad) that makes it equally easy to scroll either axis.
Under the hood, is this running shell commands (or Apple events) or is it actually clicking around in the UI?
If the latter, I'm a bit skeptical, as I haven't had great success with Claude's visual recognition. It regularly tells me there's nothing wrong with completely broken screenshots.
I regularly show Claude Code a screenshot of a completely broken UI--lots of cut off text, overlapping elements all over the place, the works--and Claude will reply something like "Perfect! The screenshot shows that XYZ is working."
I can describe what is wrong with the screenshot to make Claude fix the problem, but it's not entirely clear to what extent it's using the screenshot versus my description. Any human with two brain cells wouldn't need the problems pointed out.
This is my experience as well. If CC does something, and I get broken results and reply with just an image it will almost always reply with "X is working!" response. Sometimes just telling it to look more closely is enough, or sometimes I have to be more specific. It seems to be able to read text from screenshots of logs just fine though and always seems to process those as I'd expect.
You just said the user is incapable of providing informed consent.
In any context, I really dislike software that prevents me from doing something dangerous in order to "protect" me. That's how we get iOS.
The user is an adult, they can consent to this if they want to. If Anthropic is using dark patterns to trick them that's a different story--that wouldn't be informed consent--but I don't think that's happening here?
This is not about if people should be allowed to harm themselves though.
Legally, yes. Yes, everyone can do that.
The question though is if that is a good thing. Do we just want to look away when large orgs benefit from people not realizing that they're doing self-harm?
Do we want to ignore the larger societal implications of this?
If you want to delete your rootfs, be my guest.
I just won't be cheering for a corp that tells you that you're brilliant and absolutely right for doing so.
I believe it's a bad thing to frame this as a conflict between individual freedom and protecting the weak(est) parts of society. I don't think that anything good can come out of seeing the world that way.
Based on some discussions of users that have already downloaded Tahoe, I was under the impression that this is no longer possible? Also, I think it’s not possible to have the scroll bar outside of the window instead of overlaying some content.
Traditionally the setting has moved the scroll bar outside of content. I can’t say for sure what they’ve done in Tahoe, but I’m not sure how else it would work—if the scroll bar is persistent it will persistently cover your content.
Yeah that is also true. I have had that experience with certain CD-ROMs (maybe like two or three ever but has happened) on my PowerBook 2400c. If the authoring machine had a higher display resolution than my machine, and the author had the writable disc image's window open to a place outside my screen resolution, and the window positions got saved to the DesktopDB/DesktopDF, and the DesktopDB/DesktopDF got written to the CD-ROM, then it would open in the position outside my screen resolution every time my own DesktopDB/DesktopDF got erased. One particular artist's CD-ROM is completely outside of it which annoys me every time.
>Note that downside: you could only resize from that bottom right corner, not from any other edge!
This was one of the worst things about MacOS and why they lost me as a user early on. I used to be a Mac Sysadmin for 3 years, and the awful window system (and Finder) made it a living hell. I still don't find much to like about the GUI part of MacOS.
Imagine if you were authoring and/or editing prose directly in html, as opposed to using some CMS. You're using your writing brain, not your coding brain. You don't want to think about code.
It's still a little annoying to put <p> before each paragraph, but not by that much. By contrast, once you start adding closing tags, you're much closer to computer code.
I'm not sure if that makes sense but it's the way I think about it.
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