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Well done! I used to play Sudoko daily, but have switched to KENKEN, and I think a similar approach would work well.


It works great with AI tools. Checkout the LangChain or Boxcars gem.


In a world where people gravitate to LLMs for quick answers instead of wading through ads and whatnot, it seems like you would want an LLM to site your content for further context. If the user just wanted an answer, they probably wouldn't have spent much time on your site.


Ha, but ads and whatnot are not a requirement for a website.

Plus, why wouldn’t llms be able to crawl websites as well?

Are llms going to improve the web or fragment it further as ads did?


The ads and whatnot are why the site exists! That’s the point, with the content being the hook. If people aren’t looking at the ads, it’s a loss.


We ported the core of LangChain to Ruby, and while it is way more that 100 lines, I would give similar feedback as the author. Here is the repo if anyone is interested https://github.com/BoxcarsAI/boxcars


We were very happy using Jumpstart Pro and were able to stay connected to changes as it evolved.


+1 on Jumpstart Pro


ScaleFactor | Multiple Full-time Positions onsite and remote offices | Austin TX, Denver CO, Vancouver

ScaleFactor is the smart finance software that is changing the way modern businesses operate. By automating complex bookkeeping tasks and translating financial information into usable business insights, we are enabling business owners, managers, and entrepreneurs to focus on what they love: running and growing their business.

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https://scalefactor.com/current-openings/


Corporate firewall rule writer: "I can block all proxy access by not letting folks connect to a site with the word proxy in it." What could go wrong with that?


Ditto for my wife. She also does not like the 45 degree "bent" insertion approach because "it hurts more".


This is what we do, but we can also do his rollout example in production by putting both new and old into production side by side and then targeting percentages of new users.


I guess their marketing was out of other ideas and just went back to the well one more time. It has probably been 10 years now since I really considered CPU clock speed as a factor when buying a computer.


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