@nilact@ePandu@anant_garg I hate typing too much, sometimes it becomes pain as I have many things to express but keyboard typing is pain. So the idea here is, I just do this with the help of tiny joystick and the mic. Use Joystick keys control the stuff as most are enter, backspace etc..
@ePandu@anant_garg Yes, trigger, it goes into Claude Code / Codex or any app, then press another key to enter so the work gets started and configure few more keys for up down etc.. just a basic flow to start off with.
How is this Dashcam?
https://t.co/TssYeDVyM9
Do we still need to do wiring and all or we get rechargeable ones or something? I am just scared to allow non standard wiring in the car.
A couple of years back in Switzerland I saw firsthand how some of us behave abroad.
I think it was Mount Titlis. They had a self-serve restaurant: you pick up your food from the counter, eat at your table, then drop the dishes off at a designated area. There was a group of Indians there, maybe 7-8 friends in their late 20s, having a meal and enjoying themselves. No noise, nothing loud. But once they were done, they just left the used plates and glasses on the table and walked off.
The server lost it. He started yelling, telling the others around him that these guys had no sense. It wasn't in English, but the body language said everything.
Of course it made us feel bad. Why do Indians behave like this when they are abroad? But flip it around. A lot of the time we take things for granted, and honestly we're often clueless about the culture of the country we're visiting. We just don't know the dos and don'ts.
I think it could be a lot better if some basic dos and don'ts were shared, maybe at the time of getting a visa, or the way that restaurant could have. Just imagine if that restaurant had it written clearly on a board. I am sure most people would have followed it.
And I am not trying to shield Indians here. We mess up, no question. But let's not pin it only on us. Every country has people like that. A few years back on a trip to Brazil, my flight was full of Japanese kids creating absolute chaos. That doesn't make all Japanese people bad. They were just overexcited and having a good time without thinking about anyone else.
A Swiss hotel once displayed a list of special rules exclusively for Indian guests which I personally saw and was appalled.
Today, videos of garba in restaurants, loud conversations in airports, and turning aircraft cabins into picnic spots keep doing the rounds. Even in Davos, an Indian businessman blasted Punjabi music in a club so the whole town could hear it, calling it “soft power” but to everyone’s annoyance.
Japan earned global admiration through their courtesy and civic sense. If India wants to be a true global superpower, the world should remember Indians for its excellence, consideration and respect for others.
Our civic sense seriously needs to be upgraded.
Visited Benne at Chowpaty today. Totally loved it, really impressive crowd management, so well organized, loved the food and desserts too but the best part was how organized neat and clean things were.
@manan Just got a mic and trying it out with Wisprflow but saying Press Enter at the end is so irritating, so thinking of getting a small joystick like wireless controller and configure hot keys
Talking to Agents whole day is another level of mental task. At one point you feel like stopping but then you want to do more as it can get stuff done quickly. Too much typing. Going to move to voice mode from tomorrow. Let’s see.