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I'm jealous. I have to press that key about 15 times for varying durations if I want the emoji picker to show.

I spent a week in hospital last year and one old bloke in our ward watched YouTube on his phone all day every day at full volume. The rest of us offered to buy him some headphones but he was a cantankerous old shit and was having none of it.

The interesting side note to that story though is that I discovered there's an incredibly seedy side to YouTube premium - all he watched was AI generated videos, with an AI generated voice reading out an AI generated script about how some child had lost their parents in a war and then went on to find god, or a "serviceman" had been in a helicopter crash and then gone on to find god. It's basically scamming old people who are fearing the end. I know it's YouTube Premium because literally every 3rd video was a video about "how do I find my purchased videos on YouTube" which he would watch 20 times in a row and then eventually go off and find his purchased scam bait.

Despite how annoying all this was, I came out of it most angry at YouTube and everyone who works there enabling predatory scumbags to target sick old people.


Almost enough to make me consider flying with United.

A broken clock is right twice a day.

Maybe they're all just tired of winning.

Almost everything in this article is wrong, this person shouldn't be allowed near a computer.

According to that page Actions is absolutely fine today. That seems even less reliable than the official GitHub status page.

Edit: I do appreciate the aggregate though.


I think it's pretty slow to update.. it is nowhere near realtime. But I bet tomorrow this downtime will be reflected.

(example https://www.githubstatus.com/incidents/g9j4tmfqdd09 : ~1 hour Actions outage on Mar 5)


I'm assuming they've completed the migration to Azure, so now GitHub is exactly as reliable as anything else on Azure.

In October they were talking about it taking 18 months.

https://thenewstack.io/github-will-prioritize-migrating-to-a...


I've been using Jetify Devbox as a package manager on my Mac as it's generally better than Homebrew, but lately it's been a little flaky (no pun intended). Anyone know if this can do the same?

We see project specific environments superior to having global packages installed.

You can do things like creating ad-hoc environments:

$ devenv -O languages.rust.enable:true shell

Once you teach your coding agent to use it, it will just use it to get packages if needs any: https://devenv.sh/integrations/claude-code/#global-configura...


Can you describe what you like about it vs brew?

Does anything running on Azure have an acceptable uptime?

I really hate Electron, but something is so rotten under macOS that even some of Apple's own native apps are appalling. The Settings and Passwords apps are so bad as to be almost unusable, I'd love to know how and why they're that bad - are they catalyst, or just badly made?

While there are missing features (e.g. ability to merge records), I have to say that Passwords.app is worlds ahead of 1Password since their electron rewrite. System Settings is not the best (mostly because the search is broken), but Passwords is sufficiently good that I haven't bothered looking what it's written using, whereas I can immediately tell with Electron.

System Settings is so slow for the amount of contents it has that I have to say it is probably the worst offender per content capita

Hard agree on 1Password. After Slack it's probably the worst Electron app on my Mac.

They did something to Settings after MacOS Monterey that made it very slow. I miss the snappiness of the old app!

I don't know for a fact, but I'd bet a few digits of cold hard cash it's a SwiftUI rewrite that is to blame. (Any1 in the know want to chime in?)

And yeah, it's terrible. Apple doesn't make good apps anymore.

(This is part of why I think electron does so well -- it's not as good as a really good native app [e.g. Sublime Text], but it's way better than the sort of default whatever you'll get doing native. You get a lot of niceness that's built into the web stack.)


Well, perhaps it has something to do with the fact that they started using webviews for stuff like system UI: https://blog.jim-nielsen.com/2022/inspecting-web-views-in-ma...

Some of their apps do run web views disguised as native applications—Apple Music, for instance.

Passwords works fine for me, Settings does display notorious lag loading icons, but Apple Music is by far the most disgustingly bad “native” app. Everything is slow on that one, everything takes ages to load, everything makes scrolling choke and stutter, everything even looks like a website crammed inside a desktop window, and to top it all off, the feature disparity between mobile and desktop is so large that you can still see remnants of iTunes floating around on desktop while still not being able to sync the entire condition-set of smart playlists between devices. It’s appalling.

But hey, Apple is a small company after all, they must lack the resources to make their once flagship service run decently on these powerful new chips.


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