• 1 Post
  • 24 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 7th, 2023

help-circle


  • Actually there’s an idea sparking up on me.

    When I was a junior programmer there were some business guys coming up with the requirement to implement their own validation language (similar to regex). I always thought it is totally stupid to invent your own instead of using something that already exists. But it turned out to be great fun implementing it. I had no prior knowledge in implementing parsers and interpreters. But man I was so proud after I came up with my own solution for the problem. It was such fun, that I even was doing over hours. At the end I create my own tokenizer, a parser and an interpreter. Even something similar to what I now know most people would call an AST (abstract syntax tree).

    However, I know I have bought the Crafting Interpreters book without having read it. I really should start digging into it.





  • Kann ich nicht ganz zustimmen dass es sich wie D1 mit besser Grafik spielt. Bis auf die wieder sehr viel düstere Atmosphäre und den Art Style hat es eigentlich wenig mit D1 zu tun. Das Video scheint generell von jemand gemacht worden zu sein der mit der Diablo Reihe an sich wohl bisher wenig anfangen konnte (abgesehen davon dass es sich hier eher um Unterhaltung als ein ernsthaftes Review handelt). Und ja, wer Diablo 1-3 nicht schon gerne gespielt hat, der wird hier auch kein anderes Spiel finden (was auch gut so ist). Die Open World von D4 erinnert mich sogar eher an ein WoW. Was noch fehlt ist ein System um Gruppen mit anderen Spielern zu finden. Aber die eigentliche Stärke von D4 ist das nochmals deutlich komplexer gewordene Metagame. Ich habe auf jeden Fall sehr viel Spaß damit.



  • With trivial search requests, I mean stuff like entering the name of a company as a search term, where you could have easily just entered the direct URL in our browser instead. There is almost no benefit for using Kagi on this. Almost every search engine will give you the result you are looking for as the first search result.

    Kagi is perfect people doing a lot of research in the web. I am a software developer. When I try to find solutions for programming related topics, Kagi gives me much better results than Google since they don’t show me all the ads and don’t do weird ranking stuff. Also, I am able to ask Kagi to only show discussion from public forums or even let them summarize the results via AI. Doing product research is also a lot more helpful with Kagi.


  • Yes, that limited number of included searches is my only criticism I have with Kagi. They are aware of this, and are trying to offer customers more searches for the same price by improving their costs. I am glad they decided to do this by reducing their costs and have decided to not go the road of monetizing their users by selling ads and customer data.

    However, I try to use Kagi only for serious search requests. For other very trivial searches, I use Startpage. For me, works OK. But I hope that one day Kagi offers enough searches, so I can just use it everywhere as my default search engine without having to thinking about it.





  • I do understand that if companies running ad-supported models, they need to make sure users are actually watching those ads. Seems logically to me - no ads mean no money, and no money means no sustainable business model.

    On the other side, as a user, I just can’t browse the internet without an ad-blocker any more. They just got so annoying and sometimes even break the actual website.

    But to be honest, I don’t see an alternative to ad-supported models except paying money directly via subscriptions plans etc. But this also will not work in the long term. I just can’t pay afford to pay a subscription for each website I visit during the day.






  • Also been on Reddit for more than 12 years now. But with recent development regarding third party apps, I’ve made my peace with it. As soon as those apps shut down, I’ll abandon my Reddit account. However, I’ll not be going to delete my post and comments, since I don’t see any sense in doing so. Reddit will not care as some kind of protest, and my data should have already been scraped by dozens of search engines and AI-training companies anyway.


  • eight_byte@feddit.detoTechnology@beehaw.org*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    12
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    The same works with .json at the end if you want to consume it in JSON format. In fact, that’s exactly what some of the third party Reddit apps do until the day. However, I just want to mention that it is just a question of time until Reddit will shut down this feature. As soon as they introduce their new API pricing, they need to force users into using their new APIs instead of using this kind of workaround from old Reddit times. So better do not rely on this to work any longer.


  • Yes, while Apollo is generally a free app, it has a premium subscription for users, providing advanced features like push notifications and other stuff. Since the app developers have to run their own backend to make those features work, users have to pay a small fee (what is totally OK for me since it is such a great app and I liked to support the developer this way).

    You are right that this just solves a small part of the problem. If the numbers I have seen are correct, the API calls from all those mobile apps just make up a small number from the overall. A huge issue seem to be all those search engines and AI dudes feeding their stuff with data from Reddit (🫣 why would someone want to do this…). For those, I think it is still fair to let them pay per API request. So they could just give regular users a large amount of API request and force commercial users who want to scrape content with their bots to have an enterprise business plan and pay per API usage.