@Tyler_A_Harper the same reason Microsoft gives educational discounts for Office - if you get them familiar with your product early, they'll be more inclined to use/request/demand it in the workplace, where they have the opportunity to make real money - an investment in your future spending.
@miike@kirancodes Even more funny considering the issue itself was written by llms ("This confirms a deliberate [...] worth noting explicitly").
Then he complains that nobody is going to read the entire readme to see the warning... That's what llms are good at! Chatgpt will tell you to go away!
@MattIPv4 "I'm removing suspicious from the title of this as that is nonsense"
What an awful reply. It would take them no effort to just confirm the setup is intentional and part of a new feature release rather than dismiss your concerns, too.
@yawaramin Special shoutout to Twitter where at 12:01 AM New Years Day any post from the previous year will show it's whole-ass government date even if it had been posted just 1h earlier.
@phono_logical Did this originate from a rebracketing of the Batman villain Riddler since it's got the same sense of -er ("a person connected with") with the L tacked on? Not to mention the d->z replacement for the word "rizzler", specifically.
@d4rkm4tter One big problem with skill waste is that they're never "unloaded" after use, so if you continue a long conversation where you may have needed a skill for one thing 30 minutes ago, it stays taking up context until you close the convo.
@d4rkm4tter So, maybe this is just my interpretation, but we used to have massive system prompts, but that's bad, wastes context, etc. so we now have skills that act like pointers to "more context" when needed, intending to save space for less used skills. But those have problems too!