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(StrongDM AI team member here)

This is great feedback, appreciate you taking the time to post it. I will set some agents loose on optimization / purification passes over CXDB and see which of these gaps they are able to discover and address.

We only chose to open source this over the past few days so it hasn't received the full potential of technical optimization and correction. Human expertise can currently beat the models in general, though the gap seems to be shrinking with each new provider release.


Hey! That sounds an awful lot like code being reviewed by humans

I'm one of the StrongDM trio behind this tenet. The core claim is simple: it's easy to spend $1k/day on tokens, but hard (even with three people) to do it in a way that stays reliably productive.

https://jaytaylor.com (personal site)

All of my web properties have been ad-free since the beginning, going on 25 years. Cheers.


(Co-creator here) This is one of the use cases for Leash.

https://github.com/strongdm/leash

Check it out, feedback is welcome!

Previously posted description: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45883210


This is a really neat project .

At my company (StrongDM) we recently open-sourced a tool in this space called Leash: https://github.com/strongdm/leash

By default it runs in docker, and also includes an extra sophisticated macOS-native --darwin mode which goes beyond the capabilities and guarantees of the likes of sandbox-exe, bubblewrap, and in some ways docker. Leash provides visibility into and control over every command and network request attempted by the coder agent. Would appreciate any feedback, and will try to get in touch with the author (Gordon).

Now I'll definitely look into automatically supporting pass-through auth for at least gh cli in Leash - always looking for what folks will find useful.


Interesting! The sandboxing space definitely deserves more attention.

On the other side of the spectrum, we're working on a lightweight approach that augments user namespaces with libseccomp to filter syscalls via BPF.

https://github.com/corv89/shannot


Leash does it via eBPF today. Are you open to a collab?


Absolutely. I’ll send you an email


Have you seen Leash?

https://github.com/strongdm/leash

It even has a --darwin macOS-native mode which goes beyond the capabilities and guarantees of sandbox-exec and bubblewrap.

Full-disclosure: I am one of the authors.



X-Mouse Button Control (XMBC for short) is a handy Windows app to override mouse buttons to do arbitrary other actions on a program/App -specific basis.

https://www.highrez.co.uk/downloads/XMouseButtonControl.htm

However the docs (which are excellent!) were published by the developer as PDF-only, so I did a nice transform to HTML and posted it on my personal website. I will do my best to host it until I'm dead, and also submitted it to TIA:

https://www.highrez.co.uk/downloads/X-Mouse%20Button%20Contr...

https://jaytaylor.com/x-mouse-button-docs/

Forever TIA link: https://web.archive.org/web/20240825203006/https://jaytaylor...

Cheers,

Jay


Years ago I made a Go library called `html2text' just for this:

https://github.com/jaytaylor/html2text/

https://jaytaylor.com/html2text

It takes HTML as input and generates markdown-esque plaintext, with the main focus being to make the plaintext version easy and pleasant to read for human beings. Then using MIME types*, you transmit both the rich html version alongside the generated text/plain version.

This is cool because it makes it easy to respect both rich clients (like Gmail et. al.) as well as command-line or other clients which work better with simple text.

Hope this helps folks have the best of both worlds! :) cheers

* n.b. To ensure this works properly, be sure to use the right MIME headers:

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3902455/mail-multipart-a...


Yep, I do similar with all emails I send, run the html through a `html2text` transformer and attach that as the plaintext variant of the email.

Now whatever the receiver decides they want to view they can.


Hygroscopic, an interesting new word to me! Thank you :)

> hy·gro·scop·ic

> adjective

> (of a substance) tending to absorb moisture from the air. relating to humidity or its measurement.


compare: hydrophobic


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