I like the idea of custom feeds that allow adding users, communities, instances or tags. That way you can personalize better what you see. So adding a single instance to the feed would be like looking at the local feed from that instance, but you could make many more kinds of feeds.
To manage temporary files in Linux, a Bash script can move files untouched for 10 days to a timestamped subfolder, return modified files to the root, and delete files not modified for 90 days. Alternatively, a folder with symlinks to recently accessed files can be created using mkdir, find with -atime -7 to locate recently accessed files, and a while loop with ln -s to symlink each file into the folder. Both approaches help organize files based on access time to avoid clutter and remove stale temporary files. The Bash script offers more automation while the symlink folder provides a manual way to access recent files.
No it just writes the patch text that I pass split in chuncks with a git commit message for each of the chuncks, but I’m the one who has to copy that and perform the commit
If a glorified autocomplete algorithm can write more informative and concise commit messages than you, the actual author behind the code, I think you need to sit down and think long and hard what that actually implies.
I don’t need to think long and hard to realize how lazy I am. Only a stupid person would need to think long and hard to realize something so simple.
And you are probably referring to the LLM generated post anyway, because I never said that it can write “more informative and concise commit messages than me”. You are the one saying that.