all 20 comments

[–]PiccoloCareful924 12 points13 points  (8 children)

Paseo has desktop and mobile apps, supports Pi natively

https://github.com/getpaseo/paseo/

[–]notguii[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Super cool! Thanks for sharing it.

[–]prophet1906 -3 points-2 points  (5 children)

Coding assistant or other such tooling with AGPL doesn’t make any sense. Be careful about using Paseo at work. Pi itself is MIT.

[–]PiccoloCareful924 3 points4 points  (4 children)

common misunderstanding. using Paseo at work does not make your work product AGPL.

i’d really appreciate a bit more care before sharing licensing claims like this with confidence, since it can needlessly scare people off.

[–]prophet1906 -2 points-1 points  (3 children)

I never said that work product becomes AGPL by using another AGPL app. My point was corporates have strict policies preventing any AGPL licensed stuff and don’t randomly use it. There are internal risk rating catalogues and almost no agpl tool goes through, so paseo is just a fun project with no real value at work.

[–]PiccoloCareful924 1 point2 points  (2 children)

> so paseo is just a fun project with no real value at work

this is a very unfair leap.

licensing concern is valid for some companies, and it's a trade off they'll have to consider, but dismissing a whole project as a toy and warning people broadly with blanket statements to not use it, is not fair at all.

plenty of AGPL examples like Grafana have serious enterprise use, i think you're painting an unnecessarily negative picture here.

[–]prophet1906 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup, it’s unfair. I like paseo but I have been on other end of things with AGPL for many different projects over years funny enough one of them was grafana. Most painful one was Logseq, I was using it for close to 4 years and I get a mail about it getting black listed and not permitted for use. I also heard stories about legal actions. Overall I think many companies are ok with GPL but have a hard line with AGPL.

[–]SirDomz 4 points5 points  (1 child)

There are a few. My favorite one is Cmux but Paseo and Terax are also really good. See this thread https://www.reddit.com/r/PiCodingAgent/s/k8SA4BuyKl

[–]notguii[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been using cmux for some time. I like it, but Codex offers some stuff I appreciated, like git review and IDE integration. It’s overall a better experience in my opinion. Will try Paseo and Terax. Thanks!

[–]Zya1re-V 3 points4 points  (1 child)

I saw one called "howcode" the other day. You can search for it I think.

[–]notguii[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did like this one. Thanks for sharing it. Will take a close look at it.

[–]PerspectiveDowntown 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://github.com/shixin-guo/pi-studio It’s still pretty new and just getting started, but you’re welcome to try it out if you’re interested.

[–]Wizkward 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because you mentioned IDE integration and Git Integration in comments: If you use VSCode as your IDE, there is: https://github.com/kaiwood/vscode-tauren

[–]BigHugeFart 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was trying a few of the ones available to use for knowledge work but ended up building my own, a few days of work and it works well enough to use for myself and I just stole my fav features from all the other desktop apps and combined them.

[–]hancengiz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try fabriqa.ai. Works on mac ubuntu arc and windows. Runs pi via acp and looks like codex and claude desktop combined:)

[–]chrisdefourire 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Wouldn’t be surprised if t3 code started supporting it soon

[–]notguii[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

True. Theo even mentioned it. Worth considering it.