You can try this plugin as well https://github.com/marcusolsson/obsidian-projects where it has a "boards" view for the projects you setup, it has a nice approach to project management without manipulating your pure notes to much other than the frontmatter data.
I believe on the website the YouTube video linked is using this library throughout the whole video to give you visual references based on what the person is talking about. It's a pretty good demo..
I don't see it this way; Without curated information we wouldn't have a resource of valuable Q and A's for AI to base itself off of. I'm ignorant on what particular text the model was trained on but I have to assume it had a lot of details from online resources. It knows about coding languages and common problems so it has trained it's information form something. Without stack overflow or some kind of relationship between openAI ChatGPT suggested answers and confirmation that it was valid the information would becomes pointless for future frameworks since everyone would be stuck using ChatGPT for answers and it would have no place to find the answers. Maybe I'm missing something a context of some kind but I don't see it providing valid answers without the wealth knowledge like a place that stackoverflow can provide.
What a naïve and narrow opinion your throwing onto other humans. There are as many reasons for anyone to use electron as there are not to. You may not value the use cases a developer may choose Electron over native solutions.
It's very vary poor outlook on other people to think their lazy and incompetent. I'm sorry you hold these values but please try and get out of that toxic mentality your publicly showcasing here.
I would agree with this statement. You may not see Webpack directly because a lot of modern tooling/libraries/frameworks (whatever we're calling them now) have Webpack hidden away in their dependencies and the end consumer gets a hand full of useful cli commands that run magic.
Technically anyone could use those same open source projects and provide an open source solution, or paid solution as well. I do feel how you feel though it's a little off-putting.
Forgive my naivety; What happens when a country wins something like this? What is the money used for? How is it fair that the country gets this capital?
Not sure about Italy, but if it's at all like the US it would typically go to the treasury of the jurisdiction in which the fine occurred. It could then (in theory) be treated the same as tax revenue - but government budgets are complicated things, so I'd say the likelihood of the fine providing direct relief to those impacted by the crime are exceedingly low.
Cheaper employees and to fill in the talent gap. Most local talent is busy and not moving around, the population is not big enough to fill in the hires. We also outsource our devs to other countries (in my experience USA). I assume it's because we're cheaper as well...