home / macky.dev / item 47140612
Model Comparison
Model Editorial Structural Class Conf SETL Theme deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 +0.37 +0.38 Moderate positive 0.33 -0.03 Privacy & Development @cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite 0.00 ND Neutral 0.90 0.00 Technology Access @cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite 0.00 ND Neutral 0.90 0.00 Tech Product
Section deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 @cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite @cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite Preamble 0.33 ND ND Article 1 0.43 ND ND Article 2 0.20 ND ND Article 3 0.47 ND ND Article 4 ND ND ND Article 5 0.40 ND ND Article 6 0.30 ND ND Article 7 0.30 ND ND Article 8 0.62 ND ND Article 9 ND ND ND Article 10 ND ND ND Article 11 ND ND ND Article 12 0.92 ND ND Article 13 0.30 ND ND Article 14 ND ND ND Article 15 0.30 ND ND Article 16 ND ND ND Article 17 0.40 ND ND Article 18 0.30 ND ND Article 19 0.40 ND ND Article 20 ND ND ND Article 21 ND ND ND Article 22 0.37 ND ND Article 23 0.40 ND ND Article 24 0.20 ND ND Article 25 0.20 ND ND Article 26 0.40 ND ND Article 27 0.87 ND ND Article 28 0.30 ND ND Article 29 0.40 ND ND Article 30 0.30 ND ND
Summary Digital Privacy & Access Advocates
The page promotes a software tool for secure remote terminal access from an iPhone to a Mac. The content strongly advocates for digital privacy and security, with significant positive engagement on Article 12. It also positively engages themes of access to technology, work, and cultural participation. The overall evaluation is moderately positive, driven by security advocacy and enabling functionality.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.33 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.43 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: +0.20 — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: +0.47 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: +0.40 — No Torture 5 Article 6: +0.30 — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: +0.30 — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: +0.62 — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.92 — Privacy 12 Article 13: +0.30 — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: +0.30 — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: +0.40 — Property 17 Article 18: +0.30 — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.40 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: ND — Assembly & Association Article 20: No Data — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: ND — Political Participation Article 21: No Data — Political Participation 21 Article 22: +0.37 — Social Security 22 Article 23: +0.40 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: +0.20 — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: +0.20 — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.40 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.87 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: +0.30 — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: +0.40 — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: +0.30 — No Destruction of Rights 30 Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.25 Structural Mean +0.19 Weighted Mean +0.45 Unweighted Mean +0.40 Max +0.92 Article 12 Min +0.20 Article 2 Signal 23 No Data 8 Volatility 0.18 (Medium) Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4 SETL ℹ +0.11 Editorial-dominant FW Ratio ℹ 52% 14 facts · 13 inferences
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.32 (3 articles) Security: 0.43 (2 articles) Legal: 0.41 (3 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.51 (3 articles) Personal: 0.35 (2 articles) Expression: 0.40 (1 articles) Economic & Social: 0.29 (4 articles) Cultural: 0.64 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.33 (3 articles)
HN Discussion
20 top-level · 16 replies
If you're using tmux, you can try my plugin
https://github.com/bjesus/muxile . It sends your tmux session to your phone, with quick QR code scanning and WebSockets.
The pricing is extremely steep for a tech-savvy audience that could just set up Tailscale or MOSH.
How do you do data transfer with only blind signaling when either user is behind a NAT?
I’m not sure I get why this is better. Something like Tailscale makes it trivial to connect to your own machines and is likely more secure than this will be. Tailscale even has a free plan these days. Combine that with something like this that was shared on HN a few days ago:
https://replay.software/updates/introducing-echo Then you’re all in for like $3. What about webRTC makes this better?
What guarantee is there that the connection is not being MitM? Closed source app from an unknown developer versus OpenSSH is a no-brainer to me.
In no serious case have I ever considered connecting to my PC terminal using phone. Connecting from PC to phone makes sense, but when talking the opposite situation, phones simply are terrible at doing things from terminal. Keyboard takes roughly 40% of the screen, and displaying wide lines is awkward. Forget about TUI applications, Midnight Commander and such. Other than toying around and extreme emergencies, why?
Title: Connect to Mac Terminal from iPhone
Regardless of the poor security guarentees and or personal disinterest in such a service. I don't think services which offer continuous services should ever have a "lifetime" price. With a lifetime subscription the incentive of the company is to offer poor service, or to stop alltogether when revenue from growth is no longer outpacing operating costs. I'd much prefer it if the $29/lifetime would just be $29 / 4 years instead, it would make me much more secure in onboarding onto your proprietary service as I would feel more secure about it's future existence.
For connecting two devices I already pay for a service allowing that, it's called ISP (Internet Service Provider).
I had a play with it using mitmproxy and one thing is for sure, it doesn't implement certificate pinning. It happily connected to my self-signed certificate. When you set a master password for access to your Mac it's sent to their server (a Cloudflare Worker) as plaintext (albeit over TLS) rather than using it as input to a key derivation function. That makes me think it's probably stored server-side with little to no security. All in all, there ain't a bargepole long enough for me to touch this with.
Just use iSH and use the local terminal on the iPhone from which you can connect to the Mac terminal. Works well over tailscale, too.
What is with all the insanely insecure projects and services making it to the FP today? Nobody should be using this.
It is not at all safe and should absolutely not be on the FP.
WebRTC is a real super power on this stuff :)
I also love seeing it used for 'kill the jump box' and file transfer. Just drives me crazy that we lets files sit on file providers.
Especially if you are transferring in the office! Send it right over the LAN and could be instant. Being forced to upload + download from remote servers frustrates me.
IMO, the title is a little bit misleading. Since it started with I think , I was expecting to read a blog post but landed on a software product instead!
The NAT traversal angle is honestly the most compelling part here, WebRTC's ICE/STUN/TURN stack handles weird network topologies pretty gracefully without you having to think about it.
That said I think spzb's point is real, the signaling server is still a trust boundary even if the p2p channel itself is encrypted. Tailscale sidesteps a lot of that by having a more battle-tested auth model tbh.
On the "why would you even want this on phone" thing though, I guess I disagree a bit, I've been building something related: Xtro, terminal + source control + AI agent on iPhone connected to Mac, and like the use case is surprisingly legit once the layout is actually designed for mobile. Emergency deploys, quick fixes, that kind of thing.
It's better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it (emergencies come to mind, as you've noted).
Do you have an Android or an iPhone?
IMO terminals are still the fastest way to do a lot of things on a phone, but it's a much better experience on Androids with keyboards for the purpose.
And even on an iPhone, it's just fine. Python works really well as a shell for quick calculations, and you can use a script with the -i flag to make it more accessible.
I use ssh from my phone to my computer to run yt-dlp on YouTube videos that I want to save.
And I regularly ssh into my servers from my phone to run some small routine tasks.
Both these kinds of tasks involve extremely minimal amounts of typing, and little to no reading of output. So the small keyboard of the phone is not annoying, and neither is having a small screen.
Especially for a tool that only work on macOS and iPhone, and only serves one purpose.
Pretty much every developer out there has some kind of tooling that does this already, that also does more.
This is a cool little project, but I cannot imagine paying for it.
Here is an implementation you might like
https://github.com/artpar/terminal-tunnel
P2P with webrtc (pion ftw) with e2ee
client side is webui so you can use on any device
ps: the default Cloudflare Worker from my account is already maxed out so you will need your own exchange (self host on your account)
Yeah. I wonder why HN has become lax about enforcing the original title rule? I can understand editing the title to meet the character limit or remove hyperbole or make it less click-baity. But some changes really don't make sense - a recent HN Post (
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47111039 ) was titled
"The AI apocalypse for enshitification has started" , where as the original title is
"Large US company came after me for releasing a free open source self-hostable alternative!" - I am sure the original title would have got it more attention here.
Looking at their website it seems they're trying to target a slightly less tech savvy audience which are interested in checking on agents while away. Someone willing to blow cash on overpriced AI subscriptions, I could see justifying blowing money on this.
sure, but I fucking
hate subscriptions.
If you want to sell software, fine, but I want to buy it then.
Release a v2? Sure, I’ll probably buy again.
I have bought 4 versions of littlesnitch and 3 versions of prompt (5 if you count the macos versions too).
But if I see another subscription I’m just clicking off.
Phone to PC VNC is my only way to start/stop a YouTube live stream remotely. I don't mean using the phone's webcam, rather there's a camera always sitting elsewhere. YouTube's app and mobile site are both missing that button. I would love to not need to do this.
How do I know iSH app isn’t exfiltrating data?
Pfft, security is so last year. We're all about the vibes now. Get on the AI train or be left behind, dinosaur.
/s
Lol i thought no one would look at my project so just closed and went to watch some Kill Tony and I come back and like wtf, people are debating!
I do rust dev (nvim) and other ssh/terminal tasks on my Android phone. I get 82 rows and 118 columns, so not too worried about long lines. Mostly for something to do during my commute or when I want to do some coding without having to carry a laptop around.
You are absolutely wrong on the storage claim, the server runs proper PBKDF2-SHA256 with 100k iterations and a random salt, so that part is solid.
Is this profitable? Can imagine it competing with programming tools like Replit, Val town, Openclaw; acting as server for occasionally syncing tools like Bitwarden, Obsidian; webhook receiving tools; VPSes etc.
Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.70
High Practice Framing
Explicitly emphasizes privacy, zero-logs policy, and end-to-end encryption.
FW Ratio: 57%
Observable Facts
Page prominently features 'Defense in Depth' security section with four layers. FAQ states: 'Macky has a zero-logs policy. Terminal commands and output are never recorded, stored, or accessible by Macky's servers.' Page describes 'blind signaling: Server coordinates handshake only; terminal data never touches our cloud.' Security section includes 'E2E Encrypted WebRTC DTLS-SRTP tunneling ensures data is invisible to the network.' Inferences
Zero-logs policy and end-to-end encryption demonstrate strong commitment to privacy protection. Blind signaling architecture prevents third-party access to user communications. Multiple security layers suggest comprehensive approach to protecting user privacy. +0.60
High Advocacy Practice
Explicitly enables participation in cultural/scientific life through development tools.
FW Ratio: 57%
Observable Facts
Page states product 'supports Zsh, Bash, Claude Code, and Codex.' Pricing includes 'Basic $0 / forever' free tier. Product enables 'access and control your Mac's terminal from your iPhone.' Testimonial mentions 'Finally, Claude Code in my pocket.' Inferences
Free tier demonstrates commitment to accessible participation in technical culture. Support for AI coding tools facilitates participation in scientific/creative work. Mobile access expands opportunities for cultural and scientific participation. +0.50
Medium Practice
Implies dignity through tools that respect user autonomy and privacy.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page states 'Device Allow Listing - Host must explicitly approve each unique device ID before connection.' Product description mentions 'dual-layer identity verification' with master password. Inferences
Explicit device approval requirement demonstrates design for user consent and control. Security architecture suggests recognition of user autonomy in controlling access to their system. +0.50
Medium Practice
Provides transparent company information and contact details for legal recourse.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Page includes full company address: 'Plot No 5a/g1 Gemini Squa, Thenanthoppu St, Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, 600043, IN.' Contact email '[email protected] ' is provided. Company is identified as 'Velosify Private Limited.' Inferences
Transparent corporate identity enables users to seek legal recourse if needed. Contact information provides accessible channels for dispute resolution. +0.40
Medium Practice
Describes product enabling universal access to computing tools with emphasis on security and privacy.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Page describes product as 'secure mobile terminal client' with end-to-end encryption. Pricing section shows a 'Basic $0 / forever' tier with free access. Product mission is stated as 'Connect to Mac Terminal from iPhone'. Inferences
The free tier suggests intent to make tool accessible regardless of economic status. Emphasis on security suggests recognition of fundamental need for privacy in digital tools. +0.40
Medium Practice
Emphasizes security and privacy protections for user data and system access.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Page states 'four layers of security' including E2E encrypted WebRTC transport. FAQ states 'Macky has a zero-logs policy. Terminal commands and output are never recorded.' Product description includes 'dual-layer identity verification' and 'device allow-listing.' Inferences
Security architecture demonstrates commitment to protecting user system security. Zero-logs policy indicates respect for user privacy and security of personal data. +0.40
Medium Practice
Security design prevents unauthorized access or surveillance of terminal sessions.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page states 'blind signaling where terminal data never touches Macky's servers.' FAQ states 'zero-logs policy' and 'all data is end-to-end encrypted between your devices.' Inferences
Architectural choices demonstrate intent to prevent third-party access to user data. Zero-logs policy suggests commitment to preventing surveillance or monitoring of user activity. +0.40
Medium Practice
Protects user property (terminal access) through security measures and access controls.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page describes 'device allow-listing' requiring host approval for each device. Security includes 'master password protects the terminal, preventing access even if your account is compromised.' Inferences
Security measures demonstrate protection of user's digital property (terminal access). Access controls prevent unauthorized use of user's computing resources. +0.40
Medium Practice
Facilitates expression through coding and terminal access from mobile devices.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Product enables 'access and control your Mac's terminal from your iPhone.' Supports 'Zsh, Bash, Claude Code, and Codex' for development work. Inferences
Terminal access tool facilitates technical expression and development work. Mobile access expands opportunities for expression beyond fixed workstation. +0.40
Medium Practice
Facilitates work through remote terminal access and development tools.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Product enables 'access and control your Mac's terminal from your iPhone.' Testimonial states 'Replaced three apps with one. Terminal from anywhere, no config.' Supports professional development tools including Claude Code and Codex. Inferences
Mobile terminal access enables flexible work arrangements and locations. Integration of professional development tools supports technical work productivity. +0.40
Medium Practice
Facilitates technical education and skill development through terminal access.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Product supports 'Claude Code by Anthropic' and 'Codex by OpenAI' AI coding assistants. Enables access to 'native shell (Zsh, Bash)' for learning and practice. Inferences
Access to AI coding tools supports technical education and skill development. Mobile terminal access enables learning and practice from various locations. +0.40
Medium Practice
Security measures balance individual rights with community security.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Page describes 'device allow-listing' requiring host approval. Security includes 'master password protects the terminal, preventing access even if your account is compromised.' Architecture prevents server access to terminal data. Inferences
Security measures balance user access with protection against unauthorized use. Verification systems prevent abuse while enabling legitimate productivity. +0.30
Low Practice
Implied recognition through identity verification and device authorization systems.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page describes 'dual-layer identity verification (account tokens plus a master password).' Product features include 'device allow-listing' requiring host approval. Inferences
Verification systems demonstrate recognition of user identity before granting access. Device approval requirements acknowledge unique device/user relationships. +0.30
Low Practice
Equal access implied through non-discriminatory pricing and device requirements.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Pricing section shows same pricing structure for all users. Security features described apply universally to all users. Inferences
Uniform pricing and feature structure suggests equal treatment of users. Security architecture appears to apply consistently across all user tiers. +0.30
Low Practice
Product enables remote access across device boundaries.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Product is described as 'Connect to Mac Terminal from iPhone' enabling remote access. Tagline states 'Connect to Mac Terminal from iPhone' implying mobility. Inferences
Remote terminal access feature enables users to work from different locations. Mobile access suggests recognition of need for flexible work locations. +0.30
Low Practice
Company clearly identifies as Indian entity with address and registration.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page includes complete company address in Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, India. Company is identified as 'Velosify Private Limited.' Inferences
Clear nationality identification enables users to understand jurisdictional context. Transparent corporate registration information builds trust in legal standing. +0.30
Low Practice
Tool enables access to AI coding assistants (Claude Code, Codex) for development.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page states support for 'Claude Code by Anthropic' and 'Codex by OpenAI.' Product enables access to 'native shell (Zsh, Bash)' from mobile device. Inferences
Access to AI coding tools supports intellectual and creative work. Mobile terminal access facilitates development work from various contexts. +0.30
Low Practice
Tool supports economic activity through development work facilitation.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Product has 'Basic $0 / forever' tier with free access. Tool enables development work from mobile device. Inferences
Free tier enables access to development tools regardless of economic means. Mobile terminal access facilitates economic productivity from various locations. +0.30
Low Practice
Security architecture and privacy protections support digital rights environment.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page describes 'four layers of security' and 'zero-logs policy.' Architecture includes 'blind signaling where terminal data never touches our cloud.' Inferences
Strong privacy protections contribute to rights-respecting digital environment. Security architecture demonstrates commitment to creating safe digital spaces. +0.30
Low Practice
Tool enables rights exercise without interfering with others' rights.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Security architecture focuses on protecting user's own terminal access. Zero-logs policy prevents collection of others' data. Inferences
Privacy-focused design respects others' rights by not collecting their data. Security measures protect user rights without infringing on others'. +0.20
Low Practice
No explicit discussion of non-discrimination, but universal access implied through free tier.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Page lists system requirements: 'macOS 15+ for host, iOS 18+ for remote.' Pricing section offers 'Basic $0 / forever' tier. Inferences
Free tier demonstrates attempt to make tool accessible across economic status. Specific device requirements inherently limit access to users with certain hardware. +0.20
Low Practice
Mobile access enables work flexibility that could support leisure balance.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Product enables terminal access 'from anywhere' according to testimonial. Mobile access allows work from different physical locations. Inferences
Work flexibility enabled by mobile access could support better work-life balance. Remote access may reduce need to be physically present at workstation for breaks. +0.20
Low Practice
Tool enables work that could support standard of living through productivity.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Free tier provides 'Basic $0 / forever' access. Tool enables professional development work from mobile device. Inferences
Free access to development tools supports economic participation. Productivity enhancement could contribute to standard of living through work output. ND
No relevant content on slavery or servitude.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a product landing page for software with no slavery-related content. ND
No relevant content on arbitrary detention or exile.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product landing page with no detention-related content. ND
No relevant content on fair public hearings.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a product landing page with no judicial system content. ND
No relevant content on presumption of innocence.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product page with no legal presumption content. ND
No relevant content on asylum from persecution.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product page with no asylum-related content. ND
No relevant content on marriage or family rights.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product page with no family-related content. ND
No relevant content on assembly or association.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product page with no assembly-related content. ND
No relevant content on participation in government.
FW Ratio: 100%
Observable Facts
Page is a software product page with no governance-related content.
Structural Channel
What the site does
+0.80
High Practice Framing
Privacy-by-design with blind signaling, E2E encryption, and no data collection.
+0.70
High Advocacy Practice
Freemium model with free tier and support for creative/scientific tools.
+0.60
Medium Practice
Clear organizational information and contact channels available.
+0.50
Medium Practice
Security architecture with E2E encryption and device verification protects system integrity.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Product design emphasizes user control over terminal access and data.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Architecture with blind signaling prevents terminal data from touching servers.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Security architecture prevents unauthorized access to user's terminal and system.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Tool enables technical expression and communication through secure terminal access.
+0.40
Low Practice
Freemium model provides access regardless of economic status.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Enables work flexibility and access to professional tools.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Provides access to development tools and learning resources.
+0.40
Medium Practice
Access controls and verification systems prevent abuse while enabling legitimate use.
+0.30
Medium Practice
Provides freemium access model and emphasizes security-by-design architecture.
+0.30
Low Practice
Device allow-listing and identity verification systems establish user recognition.
+0.30
Low Practice
Same security protections and pricing apply to all users.
+0.30
Low Practice
Technology facilitates movement of terminal access across physical locations.
+0.30
Low Practice
Transparent corporate identity and location information provided.
+0.30
Low Practice
Product facilitates use of various development tools and AI assistants.
+0.30
Low Practice
Privacy-by-design and security measures contribute to rights-respecting digital space.
+0.30
Low Practice
Architecture respects user privacy while not infringing on others.
+0.20
Low Practice
Pricing structure does not discriminate, but device requirements create technical barriers.
+0.20
Low Practice
Tool facilitates work from various locations, potentially supporting rest periods.
+0.20
Low Practice
Freemium model provides access to productivity tools regardless of economic status.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
ND
No relevant structural features.
Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean.
Learn more How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.83 medium claims
Sources 0.9 Evidence 0.8 Uncertainty 0.7 Purpose 1.0
No manipulative rhetoric detected
0 techniques detected
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
confident
Valence +0.7 Arousal 0.6 Dominance 0.8
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
1.00
✓ Author
More signals: context, framing & audience Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.94 solution oriented
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.70 2 perspectives
Speaks: corporation individuals
About: individuals
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
present unspecified
What geographic area does this content cover?
global IN
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
moderate medium jargon domain specific
Longitudinal
· 6 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail
26 entries all eval pipeline all models deepseek-v3.2 llama-4-scout-wai llama-3.3-70b-wai
newest first
2026-03-01 05:34 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.45) - - 2026-03-01 05:34 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.45 exceeds threshold (3 models) - - 2026-03-01 05:34
eval
Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2 : +0.45 (Moderate positive) 11,864 tokens +0.14 2026-03-01 05:31 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.30) - - 2026-03-01 05:31 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.30 exceeds threshold (3 models) - - 2026-03-01 05:31
eval
Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2 : +0.30 (Moderate positive) 10,378 tokens 2026-03-01 05:31 rater_validation_warn Validation warnings for model deepseek-v3.2: 0W 2R - - 2026-02-28 06:17 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - - 2026-02-28 06:17 rater_validation_warn Light validation warnings for model llama-4-scout-wai: 0W 1R - - 2026-02-28 06:17
eval
Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai : 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00 reasoning ED, neutral tech product presentation
2026-02-28 06:11 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - - 2026-02-28 06:11 rater_validation_warn Light validation warnings for model llama-4-scout-wai: 0W 1R - - 2026-02-28 06:11
eval
Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai : 0.00 (Neutral) reasoning ED, neutral tech product presentation
2026-02-28 06:08 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - - 2026-02-28 06:08
eval
Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai : 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00 reasoning Tech tutorial, no rights stance
2026-02-28 06:08 rater_validation_warn Light validation warnings for model llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0W 1R - - 2026-02-28 06:03 rater_validation_warn Light validation warnings for model llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0W 1R - - 2026-02-28 06:03 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - - 2026-02-28 06:03
eval
Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai : 0.00 (Neutral) reasoning Tech tutorial, no rights stance
2026-02-26 16:26 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:24 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:23 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:20 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:19 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:18 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - - 2026-02-26 16:17 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: I think WebRTC is better than SSH-ing for connecting to Mac terminal from iPhone - -