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can you recommend a setup with ollama and a cli tool? Do you know if I need a licence for Claude if I only use my own local LLM?

You must try GLM4.7 and KimiK2.5 !

I also highly suggest OpenCode. You'll get the same Claude Code vibe.

If your computer is not beefy enough to run them locally, Synthetic is a bless when it comes to providing these models, their team is responsive, no downtime or any issue for the last 6 months.

Full list of models provided : https://dev.synthetic.new/docs/api/models

Referal link if you're interested in trying it for free, and discount for the first month : https://synthetic.new/?referral=kwjqga9QYoUgpZV


What are your needs/constraints (hardware constraints definitely a big one)?

The one I mentioned called continue.dev [1] is easy to try out and see if it meets your needs.

Hitting local models with it should be very easy (it calls APIs at a specific port)

[1] - https://github.com/continuedev/continue


I've also made decent experiences with continue, at least for autocomplete. The UI wants you to set up an account, but you can just ignore that and configure ollama in the config file

For a full claude code replacement I'd go with opencode instead, but good models for that are something you run in your company's basement, not at home


we recently added a `launch` command to Ollama, so you can set up tools like Claude Code easily: https://ollama.com/blog/launch

tldr; `ollama launch claude`

glm-4.7-flash is a nice local model for this sort of thing if you have a machine that can run it


I have been using glm-4.7 a bunch today and it’s actually pretty good.

I set up a bot on 4claw and although it’s kinda slow, it took twenty minutes to load 3 subs and 5 posts from each then comment on interesting ones.

It actually managed to correctly use the api via curl though at one point it got a little stuck as it didn’t escape its json.

I’m going to run it for a few days but very impressed so for for such a small model.


It seems that this is only in place at the security entering the terminal. I landed in Heathrow a few days ago and had to empty out my water bottle (which I got given on the flight to the UK) for the transfer security check.

We once stayed in a beach house with an outdoor shower in South Africa. One morning I got up, took a shower (without my glasses, I am very short sighted) and went in for breakfast. About 20 minutes later my sister-in-law comes running into the house shouting that "there is a huge snake in the outside shower"


Fully agree. Walking towards the address I came around a corner and my jaw dropped. Still get goosebumps thinking of that moment. Sadly inside was a construction site with no lighting (this was around 2003), would love to go back and see it again.


Around 2001 I worked for one of the big dot com news outlets. In our reception we had a PC with a browser set up where people could "use the internet" while they waited. One day the receptionist asked me to fix the PC as it wasn't connected to the internet and no one from IT was available. So I messed around a bit (think in the end I just reset the DCHP lease) and to test I opened the browser to surf the net.

Of course with the millions of websites available I couldn't think of one specific one, so I just held down the "x" key and then pressed CTRL+ENTER (which automatically added "www" and ".com" to your entry - typing this on a mac I see it still works with Firefox).

Of course www.x(and a few more x).com was a porn site.

Of course there were a bunch of people (including customers) sitting in reception (and the receptionist herself) who could directly see the screen.

Of course the PC was running nothing else, so a quick alt+tab didn't hide anything.

I announced that all was fine and ran for my desk.


I remember typing whitehouse.com (hoping that was safe) in the early days of Internet... nope, it was not the same as whitehouse.gov!


Thank you for that anecdote, it lightened my breakfast Pause :)


Lol, in that situation, the best combination would have been Win+D, I guess.


Alt+F4


As others have mentioned, this resonates well. But for me, not only biology. Looking back, I wish my history teacher had done something similar; taken me by the shoulders and shook me until I really understood what we were learning. Instead, major events in our history ended up being "memorize yet another date" rather than us understanding the impact these events had on us or our parents/grandparents.


I love History but so much of teaching it in school boils down to just periodization. There are such interesting patterns at play, over millennia, mixing geography, psychology, technology, economy, you name it. Whatever humans do. It's fascinating how much a systems understanding of History can teach about the world around us. But yeah sadly in school it often boils down to lists of names, dates and periods.


I LOVE the simplicity of it!


When I was younger, one of the parents in the neighborhood was a bread delivery driver. I can still remember her ranting about an incident one snowy winter day. She couldn't drive as fast as all the other trucks on the highway and they were complaining to her over the radio. Her response was "I have no traction, I'm hauling a load of bread!"

A truck carrying bread is pretty close to the weight of an empty truck. The fuel efficiency of this truck is better than a truck hauling a load of flour. But... my guess is that per kilogram of cargo, hauling flour is much more fuel efficient than hauling bread and therefore it is better for the environment to haul flour around and then bake the bread as close to the source of consumption as possible.


Fully agree, this is probably the most viable future option.


Would pumping up into a tank in the roof work? Any idea of the amount of energy vs weight can be stored?



I have a heat pump driven boiler and I do run it when the excess is available - it uses 500W, so I'm still left with a potential 2-2.5kW. I can of course set the boiler hotter, but then I'm just wearing out the components to lose the heat at night (since I don't need so much hot water).

I do have an EV charger, but no nearby neighbours yet with EVs.

However "sharing the excess" is an interesting idea, since everyone needs electricity. I could run an extension cable to the neighbour and let him run his washer/dryer from it at peak times.


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