Every task automatically gets git worktree isolation to support the parallel work. The VM sandboxing is project scoped and more about isolating agent workloads from user-space for those who want to --dangerously-skip-permissions for example.
Thanks for the heads up - I pushed up a fix to the hightlighting issue.
I originally went with Milkdown (Prosemirror-based) for Atomic, the knowledge base project that I built Atomic Editor for. ProseMirror doesn't provide virtualization out of the box. For shorter notes and even moderately long content it's fine - but atomic supports syncing content from a diverse set of sources and I noticed that long documents were causing delays on initial page load and some lag during edits. I didn't find anything like it with native virtualization that felt right to me so I built Atomic Editor.
No problem, I actually went through a similar path of trying milkdown/tiptap/a few others as the core for my own editor needs but kept running into into issues where the abstractions got in the way eventually. I was thinking about using ProseMirror for a custom 'one big text file' concept so I guess Ill close the door on that idea and give this a try.
I recommend getting a colonoscopy if you have any symptoms. There is a lot of stigma that prevents people from being proactive about this type of issue.
My anecdote (M, 35) is that I got one after experiencing symptoms that turned out to be unrelated, but they did find pre-cancerous polyps so now I will be getting them more regularly. I received received meaningful early detection and peace of mind. Also aside from the prep, its a very convenient procedure. You get put under anesthesia and do a quick time travel.
What kinds of symptoms are people actually seeing? Or, without graphic details of your bowel habits, is this a "you'd know it when you see it" type of situation, where it would probably be obvious?
WebMD just says: change in bowel habits, blood in stool (would this be obvious?), anemia (how would you notice this?), unusual gas (uh, what is normal?), unexplained weight loss, fatigue, vomiting?
Unexplained weight loss and vomiting seem obvious, but the rest I'm not sure I'd even notice.
Blood in my case, and it would probably be obvious. In general though I think a lot of these questions are answerable by paying attention to the changes in your body, how you're feeling, researching, and raising thoughts/concerns/etc with your primary cary provider when that comes up short. No need to go searching for issues if there isn't some leading indicator that sticks out to you as something to be curious about, or there isn't some related family medical history.
Blood in stool has a strong effect on the odor, so you'd probably notice it. If your stool smells dramatically worse (or at least different) than usual, in a maybe metallic way, that's how you know.
And "unusual" usually means unusual for you. So if you don't change your diet or habits, but suddenly get a ton of gas, fatigue, need to go to the bathroom way more often or have a different experience going to the bathroom, it's worth mentioning to do your doctor.
I've built/am building something similar, but I spent the first half of my tech career as a UI/UX designer before becoming a software engineer and I'd _like_ to think it shows, but there is something about designing-in-code with agents that leads to homogenous outputs if you don't spend equal time on visual design as on the technical parts.
Looks great. I can tell you put a lot of time and energy into making it look good.
I think a lot of the problems with the homogenous outputs of front-end design wouldn't be such a problem if the models naturally make their designs so much simpler, but they are LLM's so they are always going to be overly verbose.
I was curious so I had asked my agent to redesign and recreate your front page for comparison and it gave me this: https://ouijit-redesign.vercel.app
Ha, it obviously picked up on the ouija board concept with the colors and copy. I think the detail expansion shown is a great illustration of another thing they tend to do - uncanny valley of 'sky is blue' type product descriptive copy that reminds me of dribbble shots or landing page template demos from a few years ago. Technically correct language that doesn't communicate much emotionally.
This has unfortunately been going on for years at this point, for as long as there has been an OSS-to-profitability pipeline gamed for startups I'd guess. I wouldn't be surprised if it has progressed to fake contributors/discussions/issues/forks as well. Seems like an inevitable outcome for any platform with social signals.
I have a terminal manager project[0] I'm currently using xterm for, but very curious to try libghostty. Have mainly been hesitant because it hasn't been promoted from an internal ghostty dependency (only awareness of the place was from this article by the creator[1]), but from the sounds of it here people are finding it stable enough. Gonna give it a whirl today.
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