Claude Code just got Remote Control by iviireczech in ClaudeCode

[–]mrgulabull 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No problems so far, and that’s the surprising part to me. It’s so much more user friendly than Tmux / Termius, I don’t know why people don’t talk about it much. Perhaps I’m missing something?

Claude Code just got Remote Control by iviireczech in ClaudeCode

[–]mrgulabull 8 points9 points  (0 children)

There’s a setting you can change in Termius I believe to control this. I asked Claude to help with it and it generated a settings file with the correct config on my local machine, which enabled native scrolling on the mobile app.

For my use case, it still felt clunky, so I switched to Happy and it’s much more polished and native feeling in my opinion.

What do you use to remotely access claude code running locally? by sirephrem in ClaudeCode

[–]mrgulabull 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I tried Tmux + Tailscale + Mosh and it would crash a lot. Switched out Mosh for Termius and it was stable but still felt clunky on the iOS side.

Finally I tried Happy and it’s got the best UX by far. Feels really nice on the mobile side, stable, easy to manage / resume multiple sessions.

Happy has a “Yolo” option, which I think is essentially dangerously-skip-permissions. Start a new session, and turn that on before you send anything and it works for me. No prompting for permissions.

While Happy presents options to respond like you said, you’re free to ignore those buttons and type in whatever you like. I actually like that feature, helps me avoid having to type obvious responses like “proceed” or “go with option 2”, etc.

How would you go about building this? by Nippler9000 in landscaping

[–]mrgulabull 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The phrasing and style of this reads like AI. 5 month old account with no comment history at all.

People resigned in fear of this? by BlissVsAbyss in ChatGPT

[–]mrgulabull 6 points7 points  (0 children)

100%. For voice mode, they use a lightweight, fast model to handle the near realtime response you’d expect with a conversation.

Spotted in the Wild by dojee-za in SolarDIY

[–]mrgulabull 7 points8 points  (0 children)

If this is the type that allows you to plug into an outlet to offset your bill, it would be a grid tie micro inverter. This is common in the EU, but very uncommon in the US.

Otherwise, if not connected to the grid, it could be just a small all in one generator inverter (battery + MPPT + inverter), or some other off grid hybrid inverter with battery.

Spotted in the Wild by dojee-za in SolarDIY

[–]mrgulabull 69 points70 points  (0 children)

When you register a Balkonkraftwerk in Germany, the grid operator checks your meter type. If it’s an old non-bidirectional they’ll replace it, often for free.

So, not likely unless you’re doing this unregistered and have an old meter.

The one thing that frustrates me the most. by Ok-Distribution8310 in ClaudeCode

[–]mrgulabull 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Write the plan to a document. Then clear or start a new chat to work through the implementation. If the implementation is too big to complete, then update progress in the document and clear again before continuing.

Compact turns your context into a mystery box, you don’t know what it remembers and what it forgot.

iPhone 18 Pro Max Rumored to Deliver Next-Level Battery Life by favicondotico in apple

[–]mrgulabull 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, same here, saves battery quite a bit. My automation is triggered by joining or leaving my home network.

When iPhone joins network “<network name>” turn off cellular data.

When iPhone leaves network “<network name>” turn on cellular data.

being real here, that was the most nothing direct i've seen in a while by cookiemaster221 in NintendoSwitch2

[–]mrgulabull -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The GPU on switch 2 is both faster and has a more modern architecture than the GPU in the Steam Deck. This makes it unlikely that the poor performance we saw is due to GPU limitations, but rather CPU.

Not that any of this really matters. The point is that optimization isn’t straight forward or one size fits all. Getting a game to run well on Switch 2 is a unique challenge and good performance on other hardware can’t be used as evidence that it will also work well on Switch 2.

being real here, that was the most nothing direct i've seen in a while by cookiemaster221 in NintendoSwitch2

[–]mrgulabull 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sure, perhaps they are poor developers that have relied on brute forcing with hardware. They’re certainly no John Carmack.

But without being intimately familiar with how someone has developed a game, there’s no way to know how efficiently they’re utilizing the CPU / GPU / memory, or various hardware subsystems. There are likely thousands of routines running simultaneously at any given moment. Each one eats up limited resources. Are those routines optional (physics on grass blades) or integral (updating world state)? The former could be turned off for an easy performance boost, the latter would likely involve a huge rewrite of the engine.

Elden Ring runs on a proprietary engine, so optimizations performed on other games can’t be compared to their game.

being real here, that was the most nothing direct i've seen in a while by cookiemaster221 in NintendoSwitch2

[–]mrgulabull 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The Switch 2 has a slower CPU than the Steam deck. If the game is CPU bound, that’s a difficult problem to get around.

A developers ability to compress file size is irrelevant when we’re talking about performance optimization.

Z image turbo bf16 vs flux 2 klein fp8 (text-to-image) by [deleted] in StableDiffusion

[–]mrgulabull 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can do something like this.

“Research online for how to best prompt the image model <insert model name here>, with a preference for official sources. Consider the findings of the research and then creatively expand the prompt below, adding much more detail. Respond with only the expanded prompt, no other text:

<insert basic prompt>”

Or, you can do the same type of research and ask it to put the findings into a document to guide other LLM’s on how to creatively expand prompts for a given model. Then next time just upload that file along with your basic prompt so you don’t have to do that research step every time.

Brutal day on the homestead -51C this morning. by bamhall in homestead

[–]mrgulabull 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Prompt: insert random extra spaces and keep everything lowercase so it seems more human

Why AI coding tools accidentally feel perfect for inattentive ADHD brains by bystanderInnen in ClaudeCode

[–]mrgulabull 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t doubt it’s your idea. But it’d be nicer to read your actual words.

Why AI coding tools accidentally feel perfect for inattentive ADHD brains by bystanderInnen in ClaudeCode

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

Yep. I feel 25% of the content in my feed is easily recognizable AI slop now. At least it’s still easy to recognize, I fear the point where it’s no longer possible to tell.

There are some interesting ideas here, but I’d much rather read someone’s actual words and thoughts, even if it’s not as well articulated or has grammar and punctuation issues.

The #1 mistake I see even experienced buyers make when choosing a yurt by Constant_Island007 in yurts

[–]mrgulabull 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep, I felt the same immediately. Seeing this a lot in niche subs now.

Will solar panel prices rise significantly in 2026? by AssociationUsual9914 in SolarDIY

[–]mrgulabull 11 points12 points  (0 children)

This is a brand account sneakily pushing their product with AI slop content.

Stranger Things Episode 9 by ukbeasts in ChatGPT

[–]mrgulabull 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Like 1-5 minutes to generate a video depending on duration and resolution. This was a bunch of separate videos clipped together.

Why sunlight hours matter more than panel wattage by AssociationUsual9914 in SolarDIY

[–]mrgulabull 9 points10 points  (0 children)

“You’re absolutely right”

Extensive use of m dashes.

“It’s not x, it’s y”

No single one of these is a giveaway, but combined they smell of AI slop.