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Couldn't get the "Join the livestream" button to work in Firefox on desktop. No problem in Chrome.

Couldn't get it to work on Chrome. Had to find the stream on youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYSncx9zLIU

Doesn't work on Chrome or safari for me

I had to disable ublock, maybe you have it installed in firefox and not chrome?

Same issue in Firefox.

Firefox too.

I would also like to hear more!


Even if you have Android 16 it's not guaranteed the terminal works. It's disabled by Samsung on my Galaxy A55 for some reason. Maybe the hardware doesn't support the feature.


I'm just as baffled. I went to the comments to better understand but I still don't get it.

I've coded on my phone on several occasions. If you use Android, you don't even need a server or a home computer since Termux works really well as it is. It can run node.js and a bunch of other development tools easily. Or you can just ssh into a server with a development environment and do your stuff their (AI or not).


Yeah, I use Termux a decent amount, whether it's just updating my todo list on my home server or actually programming on it. I feel like this is just aimed at the people who want to code entire projects with LLMs, cost be damned


I pretty much already use my Steam Deck as my main Desktop computer at home (I have a laptop for work). If I wanted to upgrade, this would be a no-brainer.


It's basically possible with any device that supports DP Alt Mode? Any remaining issues are usually software (lack of proper desktop environment etc) but there are ways around that with Android. Samsung has DeX.


There are very few devices that actually run a desktop OS, which allows to run any ordinary desktop apps.


For me personally, it's just the convenience of always having my phone in my pocket. Sometimes when out and about and I have a bit of free time, but haven't brought my laptop, it's nice to be able to just pick up my phone and hack for a bit. I wouldn't do full blown project on it though.

I couple of years back, I really liked replit for having probably the best integrated IDE on a phone. Everything was so smooth and well thought out.


I remember back in the old days on the Eve Online forums when the word cockpit would always turn up as "c***pit". I was quite amused by that.


This is actually a better solution, replacing dangerous words with placeholders, instead of blocking the whole payload. That at least gives the user some indication of what is going on. Not that I'm for any such WAF filters in the first place, just if having to choose between the lesser of two evils I'd choose the more informative.


Not so sure. Imagine you have a base64 encoded payload and it just happens to encode the forbidden word. Good luck debugging that, if the payload only gets silently modified.

I suddenly understand why it makes sense to integrity-check a payload that is already protected by all three of TLS, TCP checksum and CRC.


Good point, i take take that back. Having payload mutated would indeed be even more scary. Even more so if it actually contains real queries, imagine what could happen if /etc/hosts becomes /etc/*.


It's hardly just one single thing. The book is full of absurd scenes all the way through.


You should check out Marginalia Search as well! https://marginalia-search.com/


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