For regular PCs or laptops, which generally have at most one of each type of adapter, I don’t see any reason not to.
Can confirm. My dad had a 386DX-40 when I got my hands on a copy of Doom, and it was a fucking slideshow at best.
Yeah I guess it doesn’t allow access to those things yet although I don’t see why they couldn’t add that in a future release. The APIs for that already exist.
A walled garden works because it keeps the weeds out
You realize that Android being too open is a major reason for why it sucks and iOS being more locked down is precisely how they avoided going the same way, right?
A private local LLM. With the on-device context of my notes, messages, calendar, etc, I’m rather excited to have a more personal LLM than ChatGPT.
No need to wait for iOS 18 to have that: https://llmfarm.site/
I think it can be useful but it’s overvalued right now
Yeah, I get that. At the risk of overexplaining the joke, I was poking fun at the fact that Lemmy reflexively hates everything Elon does, but in this case, he’s actually expressing a sentiment most Lemmy users would agree with.
Which is apparently all of them
The usual, then?
It seems a little illogical to hate Elon for hating AI when you also hate it.
Yes but can you hate one for hating the other when you hate it as well?
This should be interesting.
Have you heard of WSL?
I’m sure there are many ways to improve on this solution, but they would all require significantly more effort (ElasticSearch isn’t exactly trivial to set up).
This is really just a proof of concept, the most minimal viable implementation that gets you something similar in terms of functionality.
For instance, Windows Recall stores OCR content tagged by app, this solution doesn’t. Also, as others have mentioned, a practical implementation should likely check if anything has changed at all and discard any screenshots that don’t have any new data.
It’s not that it hasn’t gotten better, but that the entire infrastructure that’s underpinning the GUI is simply completely different than what people are used to. And I’m not just talking CLI here, because the average Windows user likely doesn’t use that to begin with – it’s things like filesystem organization, software management, driver installation, configuration files, etc.
And it’s not that these barriers are insurmountable either, but they DO require a significant amount of cognitive effort that not everyone is willing to put in.
A lot of people here seem to be missing the nuance.
You don’t say…
Anything more complicated than a static website is going to have a significant amount of server-side code.
Also, the article explains that it’s not just the website, but ALL of their repos, which would include their smartphone apps, backend tools, etc.
It appears to be as simple as tesseract <infile> <outfile>
. Possibly could even pipe (or tee) the screenshot straight into that and save both an image and a text file in a single command line.
So something like this should do the trick:
gnome-screenshot -f - | tee /Microsoft/yourPrivacy/$(date +%s).png | tesseract - /Microsoft/yourPrivacy/$(date +%s).txt
Skip the database, just use grep
to search that directory if you need to find anything. Voilà, homemade Recall.