The video of the crash is quite scary. In Texas these flyovers tend to be very tall. I think the Cybertruck didn't jump over the retaining wall only because of the light pole in its way.
You can see the lane sort of end, then cones, and then a choice that a human would make easily but that can easily confuse a computer as to "what to do next" -- and the computer chose to pretty much just drive straight. Definitely scary. I have a fear of being launched off these flyovers.... and really tall bridges. I have nightmares that I'm going to be on a bridge that gets steeper and steeper and I have no way to stop or turn around and there is a huge line up of cars behind me.... eventually the bridge gets so steep that I kind of fall backwards off the bridge. It's a recurring nightmare, no idea why :(
claude --worktree is great for isolating a single session, but you're still juggling terminal tabs manually — starting each one, switching between them to check progress, reviewing diffs by hand.
ChatML is basically the management layer on top of that. You get a dashboard where you can run 3-5 agents at once, each in its own worktree, and see what they're all doing without tab-switching. It also handles the worktree lifecycle for you (creation, branching, cleanup), has a built-in diff viewer with code review, tracks cost per session, and lets you open PRs directly.
Closest analogy: running containers manually vs. having Compose manage them. Same underlying primitive, but the orchestration matters once you're doing it regularly.
Thanks for sharing that. I also checked YT for reviews and found one video that went over the set up step-by-step. I thought it looked pretty good. But I couldn't figure out whether CC has access to the emulator.
I have to work for 3 hours in a place with no wifi and no power outlet twice weekly. I physically connect my iphone to the MBA and it works great. The phone stays charged 100% and the laptop drains maybe 20% battery in 3 hours.
> The IRS already has your W-2s, your 1099s, your brokerage statements. It knows the tax rules. For most Americans, the government could calculate their tax bill, send them a pre-filled return, and let them approve or dispute the result. This is how it works in the UK, Japan, Germany, and dozens of other countries. The reason it doesn’t work that way here is that Intuit and H&R Block have spent decades and hundreds of millions of dollars ensuring it doesn’t.
This is crony capitalism and both the political parties are fine with it
One political party created the free IRS Direct File program, a popular new technology that allowed anyone to file their taxes directly with the IRS. The other political party dismantled IRS Direct File immediately upon taking power.
Imho, the fact that you can probably guess which party is which is some evidence that the cliche that both parties are the same isn't really true anymore.
That doesn't give an opportunity to correct errors that exist in forms. Forms often give erroneous information or leave out details. Some forms or deductions may get skipped altogether. For these reasons, people can't just be sent an invoice. Direct File was appropriate.
Our effective system of government basically is crony capitalism. Those who contribute the most to bringing the political party and administration in power reap the most rewards.
You had two choices: 1) read the article or 2) be racist about Indians. You chose 2.
From the article:
> In October, two federal judges in the US were called out for the use of AI tools which led to errors in their rulings. In June 2025, the High Court of England and Wales warned lawyers not to use AI-generated case material after a series of cases cited fictitious or partially made up rulings.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/odd-lots/id1056200096?...
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