I just added PDF and RTF export to KBdocs.com
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
I have been writing the KBdocs.com online word processor for my own use, but it is also freely available to anyone who wants to create a login account for themselves.
I found the old export as a HTML fragment file to be fairly useful for exporting from the web site to a local word processor, but RTF is a little more convenient. While I was adding RTF export functionality I decided to also implement PDF file generation.
I found the old export as a HTML fragment file to be fairly useful for exporting from the web site to a local word processor, but RTF is a little more convenient. While I was adding RTF export functionality I decided to also implement PDF file generation.
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Popular posts from this blog
I am moving back to the Google platform, less excited by what Apple is offering
I have been been playing with the Apple Intelligence beta’s in iPadOS and macOS and while I like the direction Apple is heading I am getting more use from Google’s Gemini, both for general analysis of very large input contexts, as well as effective integration my content in Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Docs. While I find the latest Pixel phone to be compelling, I will stick with Apple hardware since I don’t want to take the time to move my data and general workflow to a Pixel phone. The iPhone is the strongest lock-in that Apple has on me because of the time investment to change. The main reason I am feeling less interested in the Apple ecosystem and platform is that I believe that our present day work flows are intimately wrapped up with the effective use of LLMs, and it is crazy to limit oneself to just one or two vendors. I rely on running local models on Ollama, super fast APIs from Groq (I love Groq for running most of the better open weight models), and other APIs from Mist...
AI update: The new Deepseek-R1 reasoning language model, Bytedance's Trae IDE, and my new book
I spent a few days experimenting with Cursor last week. Bytedance's Trae IDE is very similar and is currently free to use with Claude Sonnet 3.5 and GPT-4o: https://www.trae.ai/home I would like to use Trae with my own API accounts but currently Bytedance is paying for LLM costs. I have been experimenting with the qwen2.5 and qwen2.5-coder models that easily run on my M2Pro 32G Mac. For reasoning I have been going back to using OpenAI O1 and Claude Sonnet, but after my preliminary tests with Deepseek-R1, I feel like I can do most everything now on my personal computer. I am using: ollama run deepseek-r1:32b I recently published my new book “ Ollama in Action: Building Safe, Private AI with LLMs, Function Calling and Agents ” that can be read free online at https://leanpub.com/ollama/read
Getting closer to AGI? Google's NoteBookLM and Replit's AI Coding Agent
Putting "closer to AGI?" in a blog title might border on being clickbait, but I will argue that it is not! I have mostly earned my living in the field of AI since 1982 and I argue that the existence of better AI driven products and the accelerating rate of progress in research, that we are raising the bar on what we consider AGI to be. I have had my mind blown twice in the last week: Today I took the PDF for my book "Practical Artificial Intelligence Programming With Clojure ( you can read it free online here ) and used it to create a notebook in Google's NotebookLM and asked for a generated 8 minute podcast. This experimental app created a podcast with two people discussing my book accurately and showing wonderful knowledge of technology. If you want to listen to the audio track that Google's NotebookLM created, here is a link to the WAV audio file Last week I signed up for a one year plan on Replit.com after trying the web based IDE for Haskell and Python...
Comments
Post a Comment