Forwarded from The Beno Logs
Note to self:
Take pride in your work. Weather you are building something for yourself or someone else, make it as good as you possibly can.
Don't take shortcuts. Don't settle for good enough. Test comprehensively. Account for all scenarios. Be thorough. Be meticulous. Go the extra mile.
When you say something is done, and when you say some thing works, that should mean something.
Hold yourself to a higher standard. You are better than this. Or at least, you need to be.
(New hashtag unlocked)
#note2self
Take pride in your work. Weather you are building something for yourself or someone else, make it as good as you possibly can.
Don't take shortcuts. Don't settle for good enough. Test comprehensively. Account for all scenarios. Be thorough. Be meticulous. Go the extra mile.
When you say something is done, and when you say some thing works, that should mean something.
Hold yourself to a higher standard. You are better than this. Or at least, you need to be.
(New hashtag unlocked)
#note2self
β€23β‘3
Forwarded from DoughNut π©
For about a month now, I've been working on something pretty cool called Exam Buddy. It's basically an AI-powered platform to help you create exams, short notes, audiobooks (please don't do anything messed upπ), flashcards, and a chat assistant called Buddy Chatβwho can even understand images! (Adding more and more features soon)
I initially built Exam Buddy as a simple AI quiz generator to help myself study for my Exit Exam. Surprisingly, it didn't just help meβit also helped friends like @yohan_nes, @DagNo1, @abel_cosmic, @bedri1, my little bro , and many others pass exams and get solid grades without stressing out too much.
Now, I thought: Why keep this just to ourselves? So, today I'm excited to share the first version of Exam Buddy with all of you.
Join the waitlist and be among the first to try it out π
https://waitlist.exambuddy.app
I initially built Exam Buddy as a simple AI quiz generator to help myself study for my Exit Exam. Surprisingly, it didn't just help meβit also helped friends like @yohan_nes, @DagNo1, @abel_cosmic, @bedri1, my little bro , and many others pass exams and get solid grades without stressing out too much.
Now, I thought: Why keep this just to ourselves? So, today I'm excited to share the first version of Exam Buddy with all of you.
Join the waitlist and be among the first to try it out π
https://waitlist.exambuddy.app
π4π2β€1
https://chatgpt.com/share/6807edb5-5a20-800f-9204-2981978d4284
The open ai image generation experience
what a waste
The open ai image generation experience
what a waste
ChatGPT
ChatGPT - Logo Variations Request
Shared via ChatGPT
π8π1
Forwarded from ilo sona
after playing around with templeos i was able to:
- change the keyboard layout (which involved recompiling the kernel)
- change the color scheme
- change the fps cap from 30 to 60 (also involved recompiling its kernel)
- write basic stdio programs
- write graphics programs
- explore the demo programs
it was incredibly self documenting and even though it has its warts it's also a ton of fun. here are some things that impressed me or thought were cool:
- everything was written by one person with 0 third party libraries or whatnot
- you work in ring0
- it has a very handy debugger that even prevents you from double freeing in ring0
- its very quick to reboot and that makes it comfortable to mess up
- there is a ton of documentation
- HolyC is very easy if you already know c/c++
- the entire OS is one large HolyC program and you interact with it by JIT compiling your HolyC programs. The shell is just a HolyC JIT compiler and you just
- it's just plain fun to explore
- change the keyboard layout (which involved recompiling the kernel)
- change the color scheme
- change the fps cap from 30 to 60 (also involved recompiling its kernel)
- write basic stdio programs
- write graphics programs
- explore the demo programs
it was incredibly self documenting and even though it has its warts it's also a ton of fun. here are some things that impressed me or thought were cool:
- everything was written by one person with 0 third party libraries or whatnot
- you work in ring0
- it has a very handy debugger that even prevents you from double freeing in ring0
- its very quick to reboot and that makes it comfortable to mess up
- there is a ton of documentation
- HolyC is very easy if you already know c/c++
- the entire OS is one large HolyC program and you interact with it by JIT compiling your HolyC programs. The shell is just a HolyC JIT compiler and you just
#include "yourProgram.HC"- it's just plain fun to explore
β€1π1π₯1