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Definitely feels like a Claude wrapped with a lot of marketing. But you’d think there must be something more if Meta acquired them…

Ok, I guess we’re in a bubble.


Manus is pretty "big" in the entrepreneur crowd here in Brazil

When it came out is was very good, and had much better results than ChatGPT


They have browser automation, and a bunch of other agent tools to manage tasks, do things like PowerPoint slides, etc. I find chatgpt agent mode better for most tasks though.

I mean given they went on a crazy AI hiring spree and then desmantling the whole thing just a few weeks later... I'll actually need prove that there is anything in there.

I see this as a competitive opportunity for Apple. If Apple smartphone specs improve while Androids stagnate it could create more iOS users.

The promised AI metaverse is still a long way off and in the meantime people still want the best smartphone.


How is it an opportunity for Apple? They are a customer of Samsung and Micron RAM modules just like everyone else is. They aren't in any unique position other than their user base is already used to paying extreme markup for RAM. Now whether Apple just eats the cost in their profit margin or charges even more for RAM remains to be seen.

Their supply chain prowess likely means they have already secured contracts for 2026 (and maybe even 2027), so they will not be affected by the price hike. But maybe they'll still use it as an opportunity to bump prices and rake in free profit, who knows.

Apple reportedly negotiated a 50% price increase in memory supply for 2026, down from a higher price given to other OEMs.

I have no idea how much RAM my phone has.

And if you think that somebody buys an iPhone because they compare the specs with Android :)))))


Basically if I have to start comparing iPhone specs to Android phone specs I might aswell just buy an Android. The point of iOS is that you don't have to.

The competitive advantage comes from Apple having the supply chain contracts in place to not be affected by the 2026 price hike as much. The Android phones will be more expensive and thus will capture less market share.

iPhone being expensive is a feature.

"What do you mean my status flagship iPhone costs only half as much as a flagship Android???"


I agree with you and have agreed with you for a long time. However, I definitely see the writing on the wall. More than one person in my circle have traditionally been Android users and the lack of innovation from both Apple and Android have them comparing devices on specs MUCH more. I include myself in this list on my next upgrade. I'll be looking largely at specs on the next upgrad because honestly there's not much day to day difference in usage between apple and android anymore

> if Apple smartphone specs improve while Androids stagnate it could create more iOS user

Nah. The marginal utility of more smartphone ram is near zero at this point. The vast majority of people wouldn't even notice if the memory in their phone tripled overnight.


Most regular people don’t care about RAM specs. And lately it’s Apple that has been rather stagnating in terms of features.

What, because they aren't shoving an LLM in every orifice of their product?

I would love stagnation, the keyboard has always been a dumpster fire but these days it is an actively regressing dumpster fire

Nice! It definitely makes you wonder when is MCP actually needed vs just giving the LLM API calls to work with.

On requirements maybe include “antenna or shielded transmission line”

Technically, the pis gpio headers can act as a really, really short antenna, so it kinda works without, but you're right

Yes, I think they just keep retrying the cards on a regular basis.


Surely the company could trivially detect that?


They try, but a combination of multiple layers of work arounds used by the attackers, and a strong desire not to false positive legitimate voucher buyers means there’s always a way.


One overlooked factor that helped the US after WWII is that we were the manufacturing base for most of the world for decades after the end of the war. Over 50% of manufactured goods were made in the US in the decade after WWII.


Manufacuring might have been a viable path out of debt after WWII, but it isn't right now. If you look at Germany, its manufacturing sector is in decline, and this is the country's strength. China's outcompeting it. Not only is China no longer just producing cheap knockoffs, it has a better manufacturing ecosystem, and it has surplus manufacturing capacity.


>If you look at Germany, its manufacturing sector is in decline, and this is the country's strength.

German manufacturing is in decline because it relied on dirt-cheap Russian energy. It's not cost competitive otherwise.

https://www.energyconnects.com/news/gas-lng/2025/february/ge... Europe has spent three painful years weaning itself off gas from the east with the biggest impact felt in Germany, the region’s biggest economy. German industry was built on cheap Russian gas and rising energy prices have already trammeled growth and forced some manufacturers to move production abroad.


When the entire Europe is in ruins, you can sell pretty much anything from textiles to crops to machinery, anything.

Another strange thing I learned recently is that in 1930s there was another tariff frenzy as well that lasted until the WW2.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoot%E2%80%93Hawley_Tariff_Ac...


Fossil fuels were cheaper too, and dilution was the solution to pollution.


> dilution was the solution to pollution

Why past tense? Dilution remains a good solution to most pollutants, carbon included. That it stops working after a point doesn't make it useless per se.


Pretty wild that MAME has been under active development for over 28 years with the core concept unchanged and no serious forks. It must have a very committed dev community.


A C++ codebase with bonus non-C++ code that generates C++ code plus a build-process-that-generates-build processes all with maniacal inter-dependencies and a guy who insists on renaming everything and moving all the files around in git-destroying ways twice a year does indeed create a bit of a monks-in-the-caves vibe.


interrogations on motives for building from source

constant slap fights between contributors (usually involving haze or guru)

important PRs left ignored due to internal drama

8GB+ memory leak during building that they're in no rush to fix


Afaik gurudumps is a total jerk, constantly being hostile for no reason to newcomers.

Haze is almost always in conflict with mame lead Cuavas when trying to upstream his code, but his anger mostly justified.

Cuavas is a huge micromanager, he won't accept your code even if you just missed a typo in a line comment.

I respect his commitment to hold the codebase to absolute standards, but sometimes he takes his micromanagement too far that just makes the whole process unproductive.


The personalities working on this project are so hostile, usually without the skill to warrant it, that it's one of the few cases where having a CoC wouldn't be a horrible idea.


A benevolent dictator then


Not exactly a fork but there was a separate MESS, for a time, expanding the scope to non-arcade systems, until it was reenfolded.


This reminds me that Linus Torvalds quote that the point of open source isn't just the right to fork but also the right to merge, and that's what justify copyleft


Do you have the quote? I would think such "right to merge" would go against the notion that maintainers work for free and have no obligation to merge your work.

Edit: Found the quote. The Right to Merge is about the maintainers right to merge your fork/changes back to their branch. Not the other way where random dev have a right for their changes to be merged into the original project


Yep, it's his right to merge other people's work that were derived from Linux, not the right of other people to get their stuff merged


I feel like every one of my repos is a separate mess.


advmame/advmess too.


There are actually a good numer of forks, but not sure if they qualify for your criteria of "serious" or not.

I also won't be naming any of them because those "committed" mame devs are very quick to inject themselves into any story about them, and harshly judge everything else that touches their code that didn't come from them.


This is absolutely so on brand.

Has its pros and cons, of course.


> no serious forks

What about Final Burn Alpha/Neo? They're extremely popular.


Final Burn isn't a fork of MAME, it was a completely separate code base that started as an Afterburner emulator that just kept growing.

They do share some CPU emulation code, but that's common in emulation, often someone wriets a good CPU core then it gets passed around.


Especially on rpi


What I find absolutely wild and found out by accident is that it also emulates SGI / IRIX


Mame is the most comprehensive emulator you'll ever get. They emulate everything under the sun: from very obscure computers that you don't even find info on the internet to mechanical car rides (yes they even preserve the roms for those).


Yeah, it's absolutely amazing and noble, especially for us that are into those things (Personally, I have a vast collection of consoles and games, including full SNES library etc.). Wikipedia, Internet Archive + Common Crawl, Emulation scene with now MAME at the forefront - those are Alexandria of our times.


Yes, I’ve been running the Apple LaserWriter emulator to explore the internals of the original PostScript interpreter.


Slot machines too.


Thanks for pointing this out!


Strange that this is a blog post by windscribe which follows many of the same practices as the VPN providers they criticize here.

Were VPNs ever really providing privacy? The underlying business model is selling user data.


I'm curious to learn more about Windscribe. Do you have any more info you can share about their practices?


Haribo power bank has 4.8 stars on Amazon… https://amzn.to/4nAgugy


Oh yeah, that confirms everything!


Just finished reading The Thinking Machine. Highly recommend it if you're interested in how Nvidia became the most valuable company on earth: https://amzn.to/42z8JPF


How does that compare to "The NVidia Way" by Tae Kim?


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