Google Maps' AI Feature 'Ask Maps' debuts in India - varindia.com
Google Maps' AI Feature 'Ask Maps' debuts in India varindia.com
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it's not Ai if the LLM is not in control
I always thought that the frontend of "Ai" is awful, but now I know it for sure: OAI5.1+ is good, but chatgpt sucks, it doesn't have gmail integration and barely able to do anything but basic retrieval from the integrations it actually has. Opus is amazing, but claude web is mediocre at best. It has a very limited set of integrations even after 2 years, some don't even work (clay), and it uses way too many tokens to do basic stuff. XAi is ok for social queries but grok is very bad. Its memory is basic, and the grok teams takes ship features 18 months later. in 2024, i thought the problem is that all of this is new. "they just need a little more time" I told myself, but the truth is that the scaffolding is truly rubbish. Other the claude (which is barely good), these products are not what w

I Switched From GitKraken to This Indie Git Client and I’m Not Going Back
I've been using GitKraken for the past three years. It's a solid tool, no doubt. But when they bumped the price to $99/year and started locking basic features behind the paywall, I started looking around. I didn't expect to find anything worth switching to. Then I stumbled on GitSquid. I honestly don't remember how I found it - probably a random thread on Reddit or Hacker News. The website looked clean, the screenshots looked promising, and it had a free tier, so I figured I'd give it a shot. Worst case, I'd uninstall it after 10 minutes like every other "GitKraken alternative" I'd tried before. That was two weeks ago. I've since uninstalled GitKraken. First Impressions The install was fast. No account creation, no sign-in, no "let us send you onboarding emails", just download the DMG, dra

Truth Technology and the Architecture of Digital Trust
The digital economy has entered a credibility crisis. Across industries, borders, and institutions, systems now move information at extraordinary speed, yet too often fail at the more fundamental task of proving what that information actually means. Credentials can be duplicated. Professional claims can be inflated. Identity can be fragmented across platforms. In this environment, the central challenge is no longer access to data, but confidence in its validity. This is not a peripheral issue. It is one of the defining infrastructure problems of the modern technological era. My work sits precisely at this intersection. As a Data Scientist and Full-Stack Developer, I have come to view trust not as a social abstraction, but as a systems problem that must be solved through rigorous engineerin
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