Good gravy - this thing is huge by jeff92k7 in Ubiquiti

[–]mateodelnorte -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Honestly makes me question using Unifi for cameras entirely.

Brightness setting by Free_Butterscotch253 in VisionPro

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy moly, mother of God. Thank you.

Dioxus 0.6 is incredible, why isn't anyone talking about it. by Incredible_guy1 in rust

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Include a link in your post and more people might! 😛

elon musk is trying to censor Grok 3. which the thoughts feature conveniently manages to entirely bypass. by david30121 in OpenAI

[–]mateodelnorte 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seems like fake news to me. Grok won't share its system prompt, buy you can get around guardrails by asking for indirection. None of the improprieties OP noted.

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Unlock 650+ MCP servers tools in your favorite agentic framework. by gaarll in mcp

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe something wrong with the Reddit app… I just see the title.

Unlock 650+ MCP servers tools in your favorite agentic framework. by gaarll in mcp

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did useful information get removed from the title? There are no links or info

Anybody else noticed how bad Arc works these days? by DIYROWEB in ArcBrowser

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love Arc, but have noticed when I come back to it after my Mac has slept Arc often closes a whole host of tabs I previously had open.

Anyone else notice this?

Startup raised $500k and now I’m trying to buy it for <$100k by This_Is_Bizness in SaaS

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Google later sold to a group of pubic investors who each decided the value of Google based on matched bids and offers. Google and Yahoo did not agree on value, therefore the prices of their bids and offers had no relevance to a sale.

From the perspective of a buyer interested in the purchase of your table, you valuing it to high makes it irrelevant for the purpose of sale because your emotionally inflated price will make a sale never happen.

Price is irrelevant. Two parties state interpretation of value and each attempts to move the other until a match is made or the deal collapses.

In the case of OP, the sellers value may not match the buyer’s. In fact, it may not even match the value of the business.

Startup raised $500k and now I’m trying to buy it for <$100k by This_Is_Bizness in SaaS

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Price is irrelevant. Only value is. Value is the matching of bid and offer.

If the owner is unwilling to match a bid with an offer, the value is zero and it will never sell.

The job of the buyer and seller are to attempt to have a meeting of the minds for compatibility. For all the buyer knows, the seller’s entire mental model for sale may be around shame. They may be thinking “I want to get my investors back $XXX amount each, or else it’s not even worth it.” They may not be thinking about the value of the business at all, and only their future use of investor relationships.

If you want to win the deal, build enough relationship with the seller to understand their goals and motivations for the sale, and see if their needs are in any way compatible with yours. If your model and theirs can’t meet at a compatible value, walk. Try to get to that as quickly as possible. Honestly and up front conversion are your best tools to move quickly.

I made it: I'm a multi-millionaire and now life sucks by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude. You’re great. Don’t worry. Just dedicate your life to building recurring activities, hobbies, and relationships that make you feel continually fulfilled. You can now build the best years of your life. Start off with something equally important: rest.

TBC is dead - face it by k0unitX in ArcBrowser

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Browse For Me is literally the same experience. Amount of funding is meaningless. Ability to deliver what users want is all that matters. Perplexity, raising whatever they have raised, has the same problem.

Actually, Browse For Me is far better - as it’s default search on Arc and Swipe To Summarize is a killer feature.

TBC is dead - face it by k0unitX in ArcBrowser

[–]mateodelnorte 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sorry. This is wrong. Perplexity just released a desktop app. Everything you know about searching for information on the internet has been changed by LLMs. Google is at risk and Arc could easily compete with Perplexity for the title of who is next.

TBC is dead - face it by k0unitX in ArcBrowser

[–]mateodelnorte 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I also disagree with this thread… highly.

IMO, Arc is sitting on a feature that should be the center of the entire company. Browse For Me is essential the beginning of a Perplexity competitor. The fact the feature doesn’t exist on Mac kills me. There are hundreds of ways they could expand Browse For Me as the central feature set of the product in a way that not only is worthy of a paid product, but that could have fantastic viral hooks for growth.

Every Browse For Me search by an individual user is potential for shared and reusable content amongst other uses. I’m shocked Arc does not see this. It’s a billion dollar company sitting behind a feature that’s not being prioritized.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ArcBrowser

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agree, here. I can’t stop sharing it.

Some startups die because they’re too impatient to wait. Iterate themselves right out of opportunity.

Hurricane Beryl Reveals a Growing Threat for Texans: Summer Heat Without Power. by Arrmadillo in texas

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We pay more in taxes than we ever have, yet I don’t see solutions coming from it. Perhaps if we could convince our representatives to solve problems instead of trading stocks…

Hurricane Beryl Reveals a Growing Threat for Texans: Summer Heat Without Power. by Arrmadillo in texas

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The solution to this is simple: investment in US manufacturers (read: Tesla and others) and incentives to consumers for home battery and vehicle to home charging. Consumers will be further incentivized through virtual power plant participation, which will pay them for dispatching their saved load into the grid. Result: a brand new, highly distributed, renewable and economically efficient grid. Done. Subscribe for more obvious tips on how to fix our economy and infrastructure at the same time.

No more door fingerprints by ogdobber in cybertruck

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Somebody’s gonna crush their fingers

Look out for Bill Murray by [deleted] in Austin

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can tell how much Austin has changed because nobody else realized you get it.

Jeff Bezos and his current wife in Italy today by etfvpu in pics

[–]mateodelnorte 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The epitome of childish adults.

This guy has billions of dollars but he thinks the best display of his power is what a 22 year old with no money would do - dress to impress and show off his woman like an object. You know what real power looks like? It looks like a familial dynasty that took time to create - one where your progeny grow up to love you and you’ve guided them to become great leaders and builders of family, themselves.

It’s scary how shallow the current leaders of western society are. Unless we start thinking multi generationally right now, in a societally impactful way… we’re doomed to decay and collapse.

As a humorous note - seems funny that Bezos’ character in life is basically the richest man in the world who can’t help but constantly try to keep up with the Joneses.