- Heck just skip the website and ask the AI to make some text for you to read
- > I don't think the idea that they could lose access to their accounts occurs to most people.
"It just works" was practically a mantra for Steve Jobs, now we turn around and blame users for thinking that it will work
- Looks like it! Thanks for pointing this out, I had no idea it was a standard.
Apparently since 2016 https://www.usb.org/sites/default/files/documents/usb_type-c...
So for any permanent Thunderbolt GPU setups, they should really be using this type of cable
- For #2, OWC puts a screw hole above their dock's thunderbolt ports so that you can attach a stabilizer around the cord
https://www.owc.com/solutions/thunderbolt-dock
It's a poor imitation of old ports that had screws on the cables, but should help reduce inadvertent port stress.
The screw only works with limited devices (ie not the Mac Studio end of the cord) but it can also be adhesive mounted.
- A few days ago I was trying to see if a anything new had taken over a vacant restaurant space yet, previous occupant had closed in July.
When I zoomed in, it would still only show me the Permanently Closed business listing for the old restaurant.
Searching by address, they do have a listing for its replacement. But they were prioritizing the dead restaurant on the map because why would I want to know current info from a map when they can be useless instead?
And it's not like this is a restaurant in the first floor of a tower with a bunch of businesses stacked on top of it competing for map space. It's a single floor, there's only one occupant.
- The crappy apps that replaced parking meters are the people who disrupted the existing market with tech
- The App Store is the walled garden that doesn't allow anyone else to ship a browser engine, except in certain markets where they have been forced by law to create a "Web Browser Engine Entitlement" that non-WebKit browsers can use with super special permission from Apple.
- LLM "hallucination" is a pretty bullshit term to begin with
- Have you looked into burrito parachutes?
- On the plus side, that one's easy to avoid by using literally any other mouse
- My favorite is when it bounces back and forth between the same two wrong answers, each time admitting that the most recent answer is wrong and going back to the previous wrong answer.
Doesn't matter if you tell it "that's not correct and neither is ____ so don't try that instead," it likes those two answers and it's going to keep using them.
- Apple won't spam you with this shit yet
Rumors are that Apple Maps advertising is incoming soon
- But imagine a modernized version of this where you can leverage AI to say "yo" to people?
- Reminds me of when Google’s core mission was to put Google Plus integrations in everything
- I will give them credit for one good thing that has come from iOS to Mac: having Control Center in the menu bar is a nice change. A few things I want in the menu bar for immediate access, and for the items that don't quite make the cut it's nice to have all of them two clicks away instead of requiring a trip to System Preferences.
I do wish they would bring Bartender-style menuextra containment as an official feature though. This is particularly awful today for visually impaired users, who are using the "Larger Text" screen scaling, lose a chunk of the menubar to the display notch, and then lose even more space to the big spacing they put between menuextras a couple of years ago.
The amount of bullshit that comes with a work laptop and wants to be in the menu bar is crazy, and when you run out of menu space things just disappear. Where did the VPN go? Sorry, displaced by your VOIP system and wireless presentation remote drivers and Dropbox and Teams and ...
It's nice that this software is quickly accessible without being in the Dock all the time, but the menu extras need to learn the same lesson as Control Center (and the Windows XP system tray 24 years ago) and have a second level that isn't space constrained.
- I don't mind it on my phone, but agreed that the Mac version just is not good. I've never understood the obsession with making sidebars translucent, and the new version made it much worse, and expanded that philosophy to the whole OS. I've been using it since betas (that was a mistake) and I don't like it any better.
Even stuff that uses a more "clear" material now is a bigger obstruction of the content below it than the old translucent gray versions were. The huge play/pause blob over videos looks like a transparent material, but you can't see a goddamn thing through it anymore because they turned it into a crazy lens. For all the talk of the new UI getting out of the way of content, it really is a big shiny attention grabbing blob that blocks your content. You can get a hint of what colors are underneath it, and it's shiny.
The trend in Apple's design for years feels like it's been making things look pretty in screenshots, but less functional and worse to use.
Another recent fuckup is the Apple Watch's redesign where they traded scrolling lists of cards for full screen slideshows, because you wouldn't want to see what's coming or what you've scrolled past. You used to have more than one item in view at a time, and it was a hell of a lot easier to stop scrolling at the exact right spot instead of blowing past the thing you wanted to get to.
Also bad, the System Preferences redesign. The rearrangement of that wouldn't be as bad if the search bar could reliably find and take me to all of the settings, but it can't.
If they put someone in charge who prioritizes usability again, I don't think this is much of a loss for Apple. Heck, maybe he'll bring his design priorities to Meta and help Apple make a comeback with whatever their smart glasses / AR play is.
- There’s already lots of rockets for the rest of us, they’re just not as big
- Because this works for the enormous back catalog of games that already exist, many of which I bet companies no longer have the code or a working build system for, and for new games it doesn't require the developers to do anything because many (most?) of them wouldn't bother
They may provide an option for developers to distribute a native ARM build (which some are already building for Quest titles that can be brought over to Steam Frame) but one of Steam's main advantages is their massive x86 games catalog so they certainly don't want to require that
- Besides, can't they just allocate more ChatGPT instances to accelerating their development?
This was happening for months with blender in 2022/2023, previously collected links about it here: https://www.hackerneue.com/item?id=34917701