Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
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wrote 29 days ago last edited by
Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
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Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
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Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon to be honest, it's not hard to have "Powershell commands I never knew" because you can go as far as building full Windows Forms UI's with it.
(and aside that, the command names suck)
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@volpeon to be honest, it's not hard to have "Powershell commands I never knew" because you can go as far as building full Windows Forms UI's with it.
(and aside that, the command names suck)
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@pixel Wait, really, you can build UIs with it?
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@pixel Wait, really, you can build UIs with it?
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@pixel Wait, really, you can build UIs with it?
wrote 29 days ago last edited by -
Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip wait, thats an ad? theyre promoting this as if it was a good thing???
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Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon wouldnt suprise me if this isnt trying the same route as the fake captchas to get users to input commands into a terminal of some sorts. Like okay straight up malware but with this context the user doesnt question the cmd popping up
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@volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip wait, thats an ad? theyre promoting this as if it was a good thing???
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@stella@mastodon.catgirl.cloud @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip unless i sinply don't understand the appeal et it means exactly what it says, i think it's trying to say that it stopped unwanted commands from running?
but given my familiarity with the concept of the warp term, i would not be surprised if the former was true. -
@volpeon i mean that sounds like hell but don't we all just copy random commands off SO/github anyway
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@tay@tech.lgbt @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip but like we don't consider that a good thing, let alone an advertisable feature
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@stella@mastodon.catgirl.cloud @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip unless i sinply don't understand the appeal et it means exactly what it says, i think it's trying to say that it stopped unwanted commands from running?
but given my familiarity with the concept of the warp term, i would not be surprised if the former was true.wrote 29 days ago last edited by@piku@blahaj.zone @stella@mastodon.catgirl.cloud @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip pretty sure it just runs some "AI" generated commands as Warp's shtick is a lot of ads about an "AI"-based terminal that requires login and a network connection
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@pixel Wait, really, you can build UIs with it?
wrote 29 days ago last edited by -
@tay@tech.lgbt @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip but like we don't consider that a good thing, let alone an advertisable feature
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wrote 29 days ago last edited by
@tay@tech.lgbt @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip yep
note the dim text promoted after the dot next to the username
reddit ad so the main body is a screenshot with a link to their website if you click under it -
@tay@tech.lgbt @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip yep
note the dim text promoted after the dot next to the username
reddit ad so the main body is a screenshot with a link to their website if you click under it -
Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon "it started running powershell commands I never knew" is not the flex they think it is, IMO.
Ah yes, let's train people to run rando commands without knowing or caring what they do, that'll go well! It's bad enough when the strange commands are written by actual people...
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Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited byWhat could possibly go wrong?
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@volpeon i mean that sounds like hell but don't we all just copy random commands off SO/github anyway
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@tay@tech.lgbt @volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip sure, but we also have at least an inkling of what those commands actually do
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Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon@icy.wyvern.rip I tried out Warp when it was very early and for Mac only because I thought it would be helpful when working with commands I know about, but don’t use often and so don’t remember every detail of the syntax.
I stopped using it when the time it took me to actually write down what I wanted in prose and the time it took me to understand what I’m about to execute was much longer than what it would have taken me to look at the docs.
I would have never allowed it to execute arbitrary code on my machine without checking it with how… imaginative AI is. And I’m glad I did because it was (very unsurprisingly) often wrong -
Support hotlines and the person known in the family as the "tech guy" who everyone comes to for help are going to have so much fun with this
wrote 29 days ago last edited by@volpeon I heard some people at work talking about this the other day, and it just blows my mind that anyone *wants* this. It's not a "force multiplier" or a "game changer", it's a chaos engine and a nightmare. This grift can't fall apart fast enough.