> This looks awesome! Do you have a mental process you run through to determine what gets run in the sandbox, or is it your default mode for all tools?
Here's what I use it for right now
- yarn
- npm
- pnpm
- mdl - Ruby-based Markdown linter
- fastlane - Ruby-based mobile app release tool by Google
- Claude Code
- Gemini CLI
Over time, my goal is to run all CLI-based tools that only need access to the current directory (and not parent directories) via this.
I’m not who you were responding to, but I use it on the plane, at home, mostly for coding but also for entertainment as well. I probably average about 6 to 8 hours a day in the headset. I’ve used a variety of headsets in the past, starting way back with the DK2 for Oculus, and the AVP is the first I felt was truly capable of replacing my monitors.
Thanks for sharing. Why at home? Is it simply your main setup, so you got rid of external displays thanks to it? I'd have thought that in a situation where you can easily use regular displays, these were still preferable.
I'm surprised that you find it comfortable enough for 6+ hours, especially since you probably need to keep it plugged in. I thought the consensus was that for most users it was hard to keep them on even for just a whole movie.
I'm also using it at home and the office or coworking spaces. Having the giant ultra wide screen all the time is great, and then I usually break out a handful of apps to the side (calendar, Slack, etc) and keep my desktop to almost entirely coding and sometimes browsing (sometimes use the VisionOS Safari instead). I like the setup and it's something I struggle to get with traditional monitors. Add widgets that persist their location has been awesome too.
It's definitely comfortable enough, though I got a different strap. I'm plugged in most of the time, and at home I'll wear it when I get up to pee/grab coffee.
It won't look as sharp as a real display at the same size, but it is significantly larger. I've spent probably 3,000+ hours in the headset, with the vast majority of that using the Virtual Display. I've always preferred larger fonts and sitting close to the display, so using the wide virtual display mode has been a fantastic experience for me. My eye-strain-induced migraines have basically disappeared since I started using this as my main display, moving from my previous setup of 30% Studio Display and 70% 16" MBP.
Not so sure about this. At scale, sure, but how many apps are out there that perform basic CRUD for a few thousand records max and don't need the various benefits and guarantees a DB provides?
I assume parent's dispair is about CSV's amount of traps and parsing quirks.
I'd also be hard pressed to find any real reason to chose CSV over JSONL for instance. Parsing is fast and utterly standard, it's predictible and if your data is really simple JSONL files will be super simple.
At it's simplest, the difference between a CSV line and a JSON array is 4 characters.
`yolobox run claude` launches Claude Code with --dangerously-skip-permissions mode inside of a container with a good set of default tools included.
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