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In my experience none of the frontier models I tried (o3, Opus 4, Gemini 2.5 Pro) was able to solve Swift concurrency issues, with or without web search. At least not sufficiently for Swift 6 language mode. They don’t seem to have a mental model of the whole concept and how things (actors, isolation, Tasks) need to play together.


> They don’t seem to have a mental model of the whole concept and how things (actors, isolation, Tasks) need to play together.

to be fair, does anyone ¯\_(ツ)_/¯


This. It’s a bunch of rules you need to juggle in your head.


Why and how did you switch from Logseq to Obsidian?


I'm not the parent commenter, but made a similar transition (years ago at this point). I have always loved outliner formats, but the obsidian ecosystem is quite strong, and because I already had thousands of notes that were just plain old markdown, it was a more natural home.

I wrote code to facilitate the migration. Nothing too crazy, but in general I wrote scripts that:

  - Add lines between logseq's daily notes format and the rest of the content
  - Moving daily notes to month-based subfolders
  - Automatically adding frontmatter to files that didn't have any
  - Removing indentation when unnecessary
  - Covert everything to space-based indentation rather than tabs


Bugs and performance mostly. The elusive database refactor might bring me back but we'll see.

I definitely have a preference for outliner, flat zk style, but I'm able to get the majority of the benefit from Obsidian while having access to a stronger ecosystem of plugins and first class publishing and syncing support. Meanwhile Logseq seems to have lost a lot of steam.


Specialized graph-based RAG. Think RAPTOR extended with "bridge" context retrieved from reasoning paths across clusters ("communities").


Kagi has fixed traditional search for me.


Ha, you're assuming GP visits Youtube. (I don't, rather in this camp: https://hackernews.hn/item?id=41400286 )


For time tracking with screenshots and advanced tagging based on window titles (and sometimes open documents), there is also ManicTime [1]. I don’t think it has OCR though.

[1] https://www.manictime.com/


ManicTime was a lifesaver when I was working as a consultant and had to attribute every hour of my week to one of several clients.


> cloud or license

The free tier is bought by being a firehose of data for them.


The opposite, actually. Nothing leaves the computer you install it on, unless you specifically pay for their cloud service or stand up your own server. This is one of the reasons I chose it for myself over using timely or toggl.


Their pages respect prefers-reduced-motion [1] though. You have the choice to see a static page if you prefer.

[1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/@media/pref...


Interesting. Thanks for the "Show"!

I'm still pretty new to VR and experimenting with a Quest 2 I recently bought out of curiosity really (the tiny price helps; as I'm not planning any extensive/real use, I don't feel like being very valuable product myself).

Anyway, you might want to consider adding your device to the Comparison on Wikipedia? [0]

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_virtual_reality_...


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Second that. This is THE solution for comparing any two PDFs (image or not). I’ve been using it for years almost on a daily basis. Part of its use is certainly derived from the excellent OCR engine it relies on. Also, this runs fully local, which is critical for legal purposes. (edit for context: I still use v14)


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