

I do like Nebula, but I don’t see that scaling up in that way.
And Spotify is basically YouTube, I don’t necessarily want to see them succeed either.


I do like Nebula, but I don’t see that scaling up in that way.
And Spotify is basically YouTube, I don’t necessarily want to see them succeed either.


The only thing corporations like Google “innovate” on is wealth extraction.


Welp, that blog wasn’t linked anywhere on the main page.
Reading through it, it actually makes it all seem a lot more reasonable, that’s good. It’s just difficult not to be skeptical in <current year>.
Edit:
Fluxer was largely built before LLMs became a normal part of day-to-day development. I do use them now, but in a limited way: as a rubber duck and for mechanical implementation work when I already have a detailed spec. I treat the code it outputs like I would any external contribution.
No LLM designed the system, wrote the specs, or made architectural decisions. That was all me. I only use LLMs when I already know the platform well enough to review the result properly.
That seems fairly okay.
Further edit: wording.


I do have to wonder, given the age of the app and the seeming lack of contributors on GitHub, how vibe-coded is this app?


I’m actually cool with projects being sustainable from the start, rather than hyper scaling off private equity funding before gutting features and selling them back at a later date.
Revolt/Stoat not talking about paid options at all on their main page makes me more suspicious, if anything.
Vivaldi is a bit more unique than just yet; but at the end of the day it is still Chromium, and will therefore never be my main browser.