If you vibe code, set a goal for your app. My app is going to fix problem X. Then, you reach that goal, do bug fixing, and be done. That way your fucking text editor won't turn into a Mastdon client, and your app to read computer stats not into the next unintuetive UI mess. Thanks for your atention on this matter. Back to vibe coding assistive tools which actually do the thing they're supposed to, and only that.
@jonathan859 If you're on about Quill, it is actually a useful tool, and its not a Mastodon client, it allows you to post, yes, but not read posts.
@alexchapman @jonathan859 And I think the other one was Sensor Readout. SR is an awesome tool; it even helped me fix a genuine problem with my machine. I wouldn't have a working NVIDIA graphics card now if it wasn't for SR.
@seedy60 @alexchapman Right, did I ever say the core of this app was bad?
But it added, and added, and added, and suddenly the UI became horribly verbose. Then today I bothered finding out that there were, in fact, speech settings to adjust.
But some people don't appear to know where to stop. Like, again, set a goal and stick to it.
I prefer lightweight tools which do one thing simply and reliably, but once it started with community upload stats and whatever, it went off track for me.
Again, my opinion. You can ignore it or whatever. There is nothing better, and I'm not interested in building anything else, so I'll still use it, but I think the least I can do is state my opinion about these things, like it or not.
@jonathan859 @seedy60 The goal is to be a tool where if you want all the features, you can enable everything. If you just want a Notepad like experience, you can select the basic profile. Options, man, options.