It is curated by humans and only humans, so I don’t see the relation to LLMs… Only problem is that it has a smaller userbase or arguments compared to actual comparison articles.
It is curated by humans and only humans, so I don’t see the relation to LLMs… Only problem is that it has a smaller userbase or arguments compared to actual comparison articles.
Well, if they steal ideas but not the implementation, why would they have to mention them? Either way I’d say upstreaming GrapheneOS features is a win-win for all, including GrapheneOS itself.
And is OpenAI somehow related to crypto?
Man, that original three tab layout is exactly what I want.
What does Brave have to do with it? It doesn’t even have ChatGPT’s models as an option.
…but it has a built-in option to do so nowadays. So while you won’t get in industry-wide change, you can still help your friends and relatives. Nowadays, any drawbacks are fairly small anyway, mostly to do with few broken site logins or not being able to use external comment forms (add an exception if you’d like).
Privacy Sandbox is the thing that tracks you on-device and sends the generic info to advertisers, something like “this user visits hotel websites”.
I don’t disagree, it’s more of a matter of least evil.
But Chrome is already just Chromium with some binary blobs. Chromium itself even has sync and Google services at this point.
Besides, what would that change in regards to who develops it?
Of those companies, Apple seems like the best option due to their business goals (privacy). Though I am not fully sure why they’d want to as they already have a browser with a relative market share dominance and ecosystem.
Realistically, it would make sense to see Microsoft try again, it would instantly get 70% of the world to use “Edge”, so their goals are met. Chrome already has the modern web standards, so it might just mean slower progression of the web in the future.
As long as they are doing the browser work independently from Google (meaning no Google integration), doesn’t sound like a bad thing. Kind of like they already present their work (Chromium and Chrome)
Actually, that workaround is no longer required. Which doesn’t invalidate my point though.
Well, it was about compatibility years ago, too. But when they did the Fenix project, I remember initially only about 5 extensions were available to install, even if they could’ve allowed more with the APIs available back then. Then it took years again to get access to the full store of extensions.
Edit: also, where did themes go? It isn’t that hard to overlay a horizontal image on the toolbar like before.
And yet they introduced nonsense restrictions on them after overhauling the interface few years ago.
I meant like the elderly might still be using a dumb phone, but not a CRT screen or analog connection.
Why couldn’t you turn off 3G on that old phone via that same hidden menu? Or how come the phone didn’t even recognize that it can fall back to 2G…
Well, they shouldn’t turn it off any time soon, just like they don’t turn off analog radio. TV is one I can understand where turning off old methods makes sense, because people upgrade their TVs and use IPTV/SatTV/cable TV much more likely anyway.
These are all good points and indeed I considered them. I’m curious though, how many 6th gen foldables have you had to repair yet? I know their 4rd gen was the most problematic and 5th, 6th got new hinges again.
I get that too. It helps to put it in perspective:
What difference would it make if CEO got a minimum wage if there is no stable income stream for the company regardless?