for why using it "responsibly" is super hard, even if you're an expert. We're hardwired to take mental shortcuts, so we might not even realize we're using heuristics or falling for cognitive biases when fact checking the AI.
Dental Support Organizations (DSOs) (orgs that dentists use to help them with the business side of things) treat dentists more like sales people and push more expensive and unnecessary procedures.
Dental insurance doesn't work like health insurance, it's more like a discount coupon for the dentist and the limits for coverage are really low.
That's like the most incredibly hard part of all of this. Everything is aligned so that you don't use it responsibly. And it's really hard to guard against this.
Just a few days ago, I was pairing with a coworker and he was using Claude to do a bunch of stuff. He didn't check any of it. I thought he was gonna check stuff before pushing stuff... And nope! I said, "Wait, shouldn't we review the changes to make sure they're correct?" And he said, "Nah, it's probably fine. I trust it. Plus, even if it's wrong, we'll just blame the AI and we can just fix it later."
...
Yes, checking the work would have negated all of the "time saved" and he was being a lazy fuck.
People who don't like coding or engineering use this and they are not interested in using this responsibly.
I currently use the official audiobookshelf app. It's really slow and buggy for me. Every time I open it, it says it's disconnected from the server. Then I have to click a button for it to reconnect.
I would use a passphrase instead of a password. Make it a meaningful phrase and it'll be hard to forget.
I had a password that I committed to muscle memory once... and then my muscle memory disappeared and my brain memory didn't remember it... and... it was not good... 😅
Passphrase 1000% I've never had trouble remembering my passphrase.
I know it's easy to dunk on Electron... but have any of yall written any desktop apps with native frameworks? I wrote a small GTK4+Vala app once and I discovered desktop frameworks are very different than developing webapps. Customizing the look, feel, interaction of elements, and general mechanics, seems like a toooon of effort. (It kinda seems like you're not supposed to customize it.) Web development is waaaaaaaay more friendly towards customization. Which as a company, you want your app to look like your company, not some generic OS bundled app.
And then you have to repeat all that effort for crappleOS and Wangblows?... And then you gotta hope that it's even possible to do the thing you want in different OSes. Sheesh.
I mean, I'd be happy if everything was native apps, but I also understand why people don't tend to choose that route.
I switched from Spotify to Navidrome+local radio. When I'm in the car, it's been 100% radio recently.
I actually like a lot of the music on my local radio stations. Yes, it's 10 songs on a loop, but they gradually change out the 10 songs. So 6 months from now it's slightly different 10 songs. I also get to spend more time with each song, which lets me learn the lyrics or notice different parts of the song better.
Yes, there are ads and talking, but it's not all bad. I like the ads for local businesses, restaurants, or events. The talking gets annoying sometimes, but most of the time it's fine or, dare I say, even enjoyable. When the ads/talking gets too much, I just change the station. There are like 4-5 stations I cycle through. If they're all annoying, then I just turn the radio down for a minute.
I also discover new songs from the radio that later I add to Navidrome.
Overall, pretty happy not paying for Spotify and not having to use my phone.
Tailscale is just more reliable and mature in my experience
What sort of issues have you run into? I'm currently on Tailscale, but was considering Netbird because it's open source. (Also, I hate that Tailscale requires me to create an account with Big Tech to login.)
They seem pretty close in terms of features, at least in the simple cases.
Relevant for the US: https://whoownsmydentists.com/