Ah I see, thanks for the link. I don't think the case I talked about is the same case as Rubber duck debugging. It's not to read aloud (maybe in front of another programmer or audience). It's more like, if your students or end user read the documentation and still have some questions left at the end. And ask you the questions about stuff they did not understand.
I'm not really familiar with Rubber ducky and just quickly searched the web. So it is a tool to create tests? Or what is it exactly? Is it an Ai tool? Can it read the entire code or documentation base and then pretend to be a student or developer that asks you questions about it?
I am not down playing the other issues it has, like licensing, cost, environmental impact, dependency and privacy issues. These are still an issue with such an online LLM tool. But that is not the point of my post and does not take away about a "good" use case. In my opinion.
For those who don't read the article in its entirety and want to test the feature in current stable Firefox:
Split View can be enabled in Firefox 147 and Firefox 148 from about:config by setting the browser.tabs.splitView.enabled option to true
I tried it already and it works just normal like a splitview would work. I personally don't have a use case for it... yet. I probably rather would just open a second window instead.
At least for gaming, given that we have AMD (and now to a little degree Intel), it's not really a monopoly. We do not depend on Nvidia. Unless we talk about the highest end off course, but that is not what the majority of players would buy anyway. Nvidia has a monopoly situation on the Ai datacenters, yes, but not on the gaming GPU side.
Actually, I think in one point you are right: Don't phase out X. Because that would mean all the horrible people would go to all the alternatives and spread like viruses... So leave X there for honeypot of dumb users.
I don't think that ease of use is the problem. The problem is, people want an exact copy. Most people don't like changes, they just hope that the alternative is the same, just without the issues they leaving it. Same expectations for GIMP and Linux operating systems... (for the normie at least).
I don’t even know what All Night Nippon Super Mario Bros is.
It's basically an official licensed Romhack, mostly (if not only I think) for graphics. "All Night Nippon" was a radio show and game was sold through lottery.
Not being an active gamer does not mean knowing nothing about the stuff. And yes, she does not need to play 200 hours like a sweaty gamer to understand what she is selling. It's not the job of the CEO.
Lol same for me. Link's Awakening was the first Zelda game I played through on my own Game Boy. This was basically my dream game from the SNES in small format for me. I have so much memories of this game too, the entire game was not even about Zelda. After that I got a SNES and well the rest is history.
I'm honestly completely blown away at the number of people who can't read, but are able to type. And are able to hallucinate things into existence. Where did I wrote "absolutely anything"??
Ah I see, thanks for the link. I don't think the case I talked about is the same case as Rubber duck debugging. It's not to read aloud (maybe in front of another programmer or audience). It's more like, if your students or end user read the documentation and still have some questions left at the end. And ask you the questions about stuff they did not understand.