have a look. i installed today as Appimage and it works well.
btw. not sure if Applications section is correct.
and to avoid questions, i have nothing from showing it here.
some weeks ago on the Linux Experiment was said that Linux misses AI solutions (like Windows with the Cockpit). looks like a small step here…
Thanks, I tested their official RPM in a VM and it threw an error.
Might try the AppImage next. Never used one till now, do AppImages have auto updates like flatpaks or do I have to fetch a new version myself?
FYI Warp is closed-source/proprietary. See their FAQ “When will you open-source Warp?”, “I’m uncomfortable that your terminal is closed-source now” and others.
actually i am having some doubts about safety and privacy since you give sudo password i.e. during update. rather using so far as play and have fun than a real terminal (Terminator keeps track here).
but at least there is some development towards AI for Linux.
I am not seeing much about it that makes me feel it would be a good addition to the OS itself. I am mostly avoiding it as much as possible.
I did come across some “AI” stuff that looked good when investigating text-to-speech and speech-to-text. It was available for linux. Raspberry Pis were an explicit target. (I tried to set it up but got stuck in some dependency problems and decided it was not worth my time.)
Also I notice other “AI” integrations available, for example the kate text editor has an “AI” plugin.
[ERROR] Failed to open window: No wgpu adapter was found
No idea, i started as Appimage and it works.
Blockquote
Why is “AI” important to bring to linux?
i dont know if it is important or not, but i agree with a statement that if Windows or MacOS develop some kind of automation tool, should be somehow copied, implemented on the Linux as well. to catch more attention to the Linux community.
i switched to Linux 2y and so far the biggest weakness for me is Office 365. i have to work in the corporation. everything else i could run w/o issue even Affinity Photo. but same time AI solutions I see as a potential invasion to privacy on the scale we are not even aware of…
Not every nonsense from Redmond or Cupertino needs to be copied. AI is a big hype atm with often questionable results or additions. Buzzwords such as AI are very attractive to less knowledgeable people, as they are often sold as the solution to all problems.
We had already ppl here, which got told by AI to use specific code lines…yeah. It is often better to do a basic research by yourself and learn the basics. The reults are often the same if not better when using traditional terminal basics…
And if you only have a basic look into the Warp documentation, you will be surprised how much telemetry data you transfer to the developers by using this product. But as long as it is selled as “AI-powered product”, many ppl will fall for it and use it without thinking about the consequeces…
BlockquoteAnd if you only have a basic look into the Warp documentation, you will be surprised how much telemetry data you transfer to the developers by using this product. But as long as it is selled as “AI-powered product”, many ppl will fall for it and use it without thinking about the consequeces…
firstly i changed all things i could do in the settings. but i dont believe it stops the telemetry.
i guess you are right, i am a home user but prefer Linux due to privacy topics. i tried many distros but somehow OpenSuse works best for me.
Installed the RPM on host machine. Looks great, works good
Biggest issue (and judging by the Github issue quite a popular one) is Warp’s own autocompletion is quite limited and they don’t fallback to existing bash/zsh/fish autocompletion. So once you type in zypper lu it will learn that command but otherwise zypper dist- produces no autocompletion as you’d expect.