···43434444With a lot of these AI tools comes the problem that the AI system itself is very opaque. You put in inputs, you get an output, but nobody is able to explain how or why something came out that way. There's an entire cottage industry of people finding the right combinations of words to get the AI to do something they want. It's like scrying into the unknown, but somehow with trillions of dollars on the line.
45454646-This "type the command for me" feature has caused a lot of buzz online, to the people where people I know are just flat out ripping out iTerm2 in favor of programs that _don't_ have AI integrations in them. Hell, even the mention that a tool is _going_ to get an AI integration has people preemptively ripping it out of their systems _because_ of that opacity. A terminal emulator is probably also a fairly bad place to implement this because it's probably one of the most privileged programs on a developer's machine. It deals with all the secrets in the world, and the _threat_ that it could be used to upload them all to a third party is great enough that people are willing to switch away from it **sight unseen**.
4646+This "type the command for me" feature has caused a lot of buzz online, to the point where people I know are just flat out ripping out iTerm2 in favor of programs that _don't_ have AI integrations in them. Hell, even the mention that a tool is _going_ to get an AI integration has people preemptively ripping it out of their systems _because_ of that opacity. A terminal emulator is probably also a fairly bad place to implement this because it's probably one of the most privileged programs on a developer's machine. It deals with all the secrets in the world, and the _threat_ that it could be used to upload them all to a third party is great enough that people are willing to switch away from it **sight unseen**.
47474848<Conv name="Aoi" mood="wut">
4949I don't get it. It's a very optional feature that you have to: