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This looks rough for e2b.dev, Beam, and others in this space. Even with e2b's fresh $20M raise, taking on Cloudflare is going to be tough.


e2b have a python SDK thats why I would use them when I start a new project, (knowing Cloudflare they probably won't)


Why not use VMs from AWS (EC2) or GCP? E2b is built on top of GCP anyway.


I have been using 1Password for the last several years and am quite happy with them, except for the fact that they basically forced users to use their cloud offering with subscription as opposed to free iCloud storage after 1Password version 7.


Highly recommend Strongbox. The underlying DBs are KeePass DBs and can be stored anywhere as well as opened with any KeePass client, with a UI even better than 1Password (you can have columns for every field) as well as passkey support + export/import (even before the official method came out because they believe in you owning your own data).

I love it because Strongbox also has its own cloud feature (optional) that is just a hosted KeePass DB which makes it easy to have a shared DB with my partner.

The only downside for me: there isn’t a universal search that searches all DBs for credentials. So if you are in a browser and trying to autofill, you need to select the DB you want it to populate from.


Note that they’ve been acquired by Applause…


> except for the fact that they basically forced users to use their cloud offering

Yeah that's when I left 1P after having bought hundreds of dollars of licenses for myself and my family (for multiple OS).

The other big thing was self hosting the vault. You used to be able to sync the vault with Dropbox and access it from a browser but at some point Dropbox killed public folders. It would have cost 1P pennies to store the vaults of paying customers in S3 buckets. Instead they decided to use that as leverage to force people into subscriptions.

Very happy with Bitwarden now.


Does bitwarden when importing support all data types of 1p ie file attachments and various fields of various entry types?


No. I used both of them when migrating from LastPass, and found that Bitwarden only supports four or five types of entries, which ultimately drove me away from the product.

The rich entry types from 1P and LP are nearly all converted to Notes in Bitwarden. Great product otherwise.


With the way the Apple is going in the UK, I'd rather give 1Password the keys to the kingdom.

Their whole raison d'etre is protecting your passwords. If they start selling people out, their business implodes.

They also keep adding thoughtful tweaks and new features. A couple years back I thought I'd give it a few years and then hop from 1Password to Bitwarden. But Bitwarden's UI and UX is still subpar (doesn't even support drag 'n drop..)*. All Bitwarden does is invest in enterprise features, which mean jack for the average user.

*dragging items from one vault to another, not a hugely important feature but Bitwarden has a thousand of these kind of paper cuts compared to 1Password


>With the way the Apple is going in the UK, I'd rather give 1Password the keys to the kingdom.

What should Apple have done? Defy the government's order? Shut down entirely? They're already fighting it in court.


They didn't criticize Apple, they said they wouldn't trust them with their keys because of the UK's request.


Yes it’s annoying but it also means increased revenue which enables them to invest more in the product.

The new features released since I bought version 6 has me more than satisfied.

Also using a password manager is one of the most effective things you can do to protect yourself and paying a few bucks a month seems like a steal.


Yes, they felt very pushy with this & other tactics to get me to use new features.

That creates distrust in me, so I swapped to BitWarden and haven't looked back.


Thanks to LLMs, I am now able to build iOS apps with Swift, which has been not only quite fun but also very useful since I was able to come up with a learning app that I wished existed for my kids with minimal effort. So I will definitely spend more time on that. Also, I'm trying to improve my time management and reduce distractions/procrastination. I enabled screen time for myself so I can create some friction between distracting habits such as social media, YouTube, etc. Also, I will be utilizing the Pomodoro technique more as well.


> Thanks to LLMs, I am now able to build iOS apps with Swift

Build iOS apps is one of the few areas where I have excitement in software engineering, and one of my biggest regrets was to get into ML/backend instead of app development.

Maybe I am 15 years behind, but the whole idea of being able to deliver something to the phone of our final customer is beyond magic for me, even working on SWE for a very long time.

Every person that has the capability to deliver something to the end user via a front-end that you can build by yourself has one of the biggest senses of agency in the SWE field in my opinion.


Relatedly, I've been using Flutter for this, it works great and the developer experience is top notch, even for iOS development, you should give it a try. Apparently 28% of all new iOS apps on the Apple App Store are actually written in Flutter, according to some independent research that was done, which is pretty wild to me considering that it feels fairly niche compared to React Native, much less native app development, but well, I guess perceptions aren't everything.


Isn’t Topo Chico Peter Attia’s fav beverage? Would be surprised if he didn’t looked into this.




IheartMedia | https://tinyurl.com/2bkr2nfp | Senior SRE | Remote US | 136-170K

The Senior Site Reliability Engineer will be responsible for leading a talented team of SREs/DevOps Engineers across a wide variety of Cloud Services. He/She will be our leader as we move toward a platform / systems architecture and infrastructure that is highly automated, fully instrumented, self-scaling, self-healing and loosely coupled. Must be a go-getter with efficient multi-tasking abilities along with efficient people management skills.

The infrastructure is entirely hosted on AWS, utilizing a variety of services. Core functionalities leverage AWS Lambda, API Gateway, and IoT Core for serverless computing, API management, and IoT device connectivity, respectively. The environment also incorporates multiple Kubernetes clusters, managed through both Amazon EKS and Kops. Infra is provisioned with CDK (typescript) so experience on it is highly desirable.


Care to share the project repo?


It's this: https://github.com/Elgg/Elgg

It's pretty long in the tooth now - it's pretty old! But there's an amazing community and new core team that still keeps it up to date.


I don't recall exactly when but i tried this same app at least a year or two ago. I was super excited but results it gave was kinda underwhelming. But again this was a while back. Hopefully it improved quite a bit because i really like this idea.


Last night we tried ChatGPT to see what we could change the “Welcome {MyFamily} Name” at our AirBnB to say.

ChatGPT 3.5 gave suggestions where most of the options needed letters we didn’t have.

ChatGPT 4 took a very long time and then apologized and said it was trying to loop over the letters but it couldn’t verify if they were real words because it didn’t have a dictionary.

Multiple tries returned the exact same results each time.

I’d hate to do this with Legos and then be missing parts part way through!


Counter intuitively, language models aren't good with letters and string manipulation. It probably has to do with tokens being a few letters and the lack of those tasks in their dataset.




Yeah this something i have been trying to improve. Taken Barbara Oakley's "Learning to learn" course and read the book(it is essentially the transcript of the book). It def help me better understand theory behind learning. On top of it i have been using Anki - spaced repetition tool - to solidify what i learned. Having a knowledge repo or a collection of notes that are written with your own words helps immensely as well.


Try Mongodb sales! Those guys were the sleaziest SAAS i have ever dealt with. Not only they constantly called, they messaged to everyone from my company that are my linkedin connection stating they are working with me while it was not the case.


Incredibly annoying LinkedIn doesn’t have the ability block everyone from a specific org. Definitely would pay for an open source tool that does this with my LinkedIn creds.


Presumably they'd just set up a fake profile.


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