franzfurdinand
I just picked up a Max 3, and yeah, after a quick calibration, it's been rock solid. I picked mine up for about $650.
One option is 3D printing a mold to fill with silicone sealant. If this is a part that fails regularly, the mold may be worth it. You then have a pretty broad array of food safe sealants you could use and don't have to worry about your 3d printed part harboring bacteria.
That's about where I land. I've used it the other way, too, to help tighten up a good short story I'd written where my tone and tense was all over the place.
I've used LLMs to write automated tests for my code, too. They're not hard to write, just super tedious.
Oh, I am right there with you. I don't want to write tests because they're tedious, so I backfill with the AI at least starting me off on it. It's a lot easier for me to fix something (even if it turns into a complete rewrite) than to start from a blank file.
I've used them for unit tests and it still makes some really weird decisions sometimes. Like building an array of json objects that it feeds into one super long test with a bunch of switch conditions. When I saw that one I scratched my head for a little bit.
First flight in 1903, on the moon in 1969. That's 63 years. There are people who lived an experience where flight went from impossible to us planting a flag on a different celestial body. That's incredible when you stop to think about it.
Himbo Hooters would also be acceptable
Same. There's something really cool here and even if I'm not a chess guy, it's still worth it.
I switched to exclusively Kagi on my phone and it's been a pretty pleasant experience. Not perfect, but fairly serviceable. You're right, it's way less cluttered. Going back to Google can sometimes be very jarring.
Depends on the webapp, traffic, etc. I have an EC2 instance and my own domain that runs me a solid $7 a month. It's just a tiny little web server. If your web app is structured in a way that the client does the processing, your hosting costs can be pretty cheap.
For instance, rather than editing a PDF on a server, if your web app provides all of the tools to edit the PDF in the client's browser, the server doesn't need to be particularly robust. Basically it just needs to hand out those tools to the client.
If you take podcasts as the zines of yore, their place in culture makes a decent bit of sense.