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Hi, this is not my personal project, it a friend of mine and not frequently I share the project on HN hoping to help him. For any info or collab you can reach Rick at info@webriko.com , if you like mentioning that you saw his project posted on HN by Johnny (which is me lol). Thanks!


Rick is a shortname =)


A totally different working life compared to mine. Definitely worth reading, thank you!


On my RooCode chat window with Gemini2.5 the mermaid charts are not always shown... 44049619.


I use RooCode and find it quite effective with the ability to switch agents and models within the tasks currently. I recently moved from Cline to RooCode.


Yes could be an alternative if you only need it on a development environment


Thank you, that's handy!


Exactly the same here... Same happens when I see the word 'file' written somewhere (which in Italian means queues, and I'm Italian), and I read it as the English IT word 'file'. This always make me lightly smile.


OMG? Is this comment serious? Greece is in Europe, planet earth and not a desolated land on Mars! Greeks are of Mediterranean culture, mainly open and friendly. They deal with tourists from all over the world since maaaaaaany years and they know the business. I believe that the most difficult part can be the language, as generally speaking - don't know why - in Greece not many people speak fluently English (also in Italy we have the same problem!!). Other that that, great sea, great food, great great ancient culture and history to discover, nice and bubbly people. Book your tickets and don't be afraid! And yes, greek people have two arms, two legs, two eyes and they are not little green pale creatures!! J/k, enjoy your time there, and welcome to Europe!


This comment is warranted. Dude thinks he's a king and is wondering if the peasants will harass him. No one's going to give a shit. It is for sure a strange comment.


It seems from a sibling comment that I'm totally wrong when I state that speaking English in Greece may be difficult. I stated that based on my personal perception only, so probably I'm wrong. Sorry for the misinformation.


On my machine just works with 4o

https://chatgpt.com/share/66e34020-33dc-800d-8ab8-8596895844...

With no drama. I'm not sure the bot answer is correct, but looks correct.


I believe in some countries in northern Europe that's not as wild as it may sound. I'm European


Some time ago I read an article explaining that initially games used to sell upgrades which were making the player stronger in multi-player games. The net result was that the games were loosing players because that mechanic was seen as unfair (pay to win). So they switched to aesthetics enhancements only and that resulted the correct strategy to have in game sales and not loosing players. Unfortunately cannot remember further details to prove this memory, sorry.


Meanwhile, Chinese and Korean kids widely DEMAND pay to win, and see people who complain about Pay2Win as "Losers in life", because, to them, it's just two valid paths, and if someone pays to win at a game, then it's just a mark of status. Btw, did you also know that parents in central china have protested over the right to cheat?

Tons of really great stuff in eastern work culture that I miss now back in europe. But that "results-first and call it a systematic right" thing never sat well with me.


Thank you for bringing a different worldview to the discussion. I realize that my comment was Euro (or West) centric, but that wasn't intentional. I appreciate your perspective, as it adds valuable context and enriches the conversation. It's interesting to see how cultural differences shape attitudes toward gaming, and your insights have certainly given me something to think about. Thank you for that.


>Btw, did you also know that parents in central china have protested over the right to cheat?

Source?


It's extremely easy to find yourself, but here: https://qz.com/96793/chinese-students-and-their-parents-figh...


If that's what the other guy was referencing, then it's a misleading characterization of the situation. The original comment was:

>Meanwhile, Chinese and Korean kids widely DEMAND pay to win, and see people who complain about Pay2Win as "Losers in life", because, to them, it's just two valid paths, and if someone pays to win at a game, then it's just a mark of status. Btw, did you also know that parents in central china have protested over the right to cheat?

The article says:

>In response, angry parents and students championed their right to cheat. Not cheating, they said, would put them at a disadvantage in a country where student cheating has become standard practice. “We want fairness. There is no fairness if you do not let us cheat,” they chanted.

The comment is claiming cheating is "a mark of status" and "just two valid paths", whereas in the qz article parents wanted to cheat because not cheating would put them at a disadvantage. Those aren't really comparable, because in the latter case they're presumably not supporting cheating in and of itself, only because they don't want to be put at a disadvantage. A parallel would be how in the US, democrats are against voter ID laws, because it would disadvantage minority voters. They don't (presumably) want election fraud (although republicans do think so), they just don't want a regime where their side is disadvantaged.


Ok, I was just providing a link for you. If you wanted to discuss whether cheating is good in this specific scenario, you should have put that as your comment to the parent.


>Ok, I was just providing a link for you.

And if you read my last comment more carefully, I wasn't faulting you, only the original characterization.

>If you wanted to discuss whether cheating is good in this specific scenario, you should have put that as your comment to the parent.

I think it's fair game to call the claim misleading, even if the parents are technically protesting for the right to cheat, for the reasons outlined in my previous comment. Again, going back to the example of democrats being against voter ID law, it would be misleading to characterize that as "democrats protesting for the right to commit vote fraud", even though they're technically supporting making election fraud easier.


Ok sounds good


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