It's really simple, it's a container containing a virtual os, which runs a browser and a webserver to run the app. The app connects to several external api services to do it's thing.
I mean, isn't the entire point of a container largely non-functional compared to good deploy/install scripts? Both are perfectly capable of guaranteeing a predictable functional environment for the app. The container is just easier to use, harder to accidentally render insecure, and easier to clean up.
I get to witness to enterprise services flavor of that. Where the company pays software architects that aren't actually coding and coders not allowed to make architectural decisions.
You have software that takes http? You need to rewrite it so that you only speak rabbitmq, and use it for every http request or Web socket message, don't worry, we have a team that specializes in making http translate to rabbit mq, so you only have to rewrite the server code, another team will handle the http listener that translates to you.
What's that, you have a non http protocol? Well, the other team isn't scoped to handle that, so you'll need to convert your listener to rabbitmq and create a whole separate container to actually receive the packets in udp and then translate to rabbitmq. No "processing" software is allowed to speak anything but rabbitmq, and network listener containers are only allowed to dumb receive and Forward.
Gets the job done, but shoudn't and isn't intended for non-programmer end user.
I'm not mad at small programs or developers with not much time to setup a distribution pipeline, they should be praised for their work at the program itself. But different OSes have different places to unpack a program and this allows simple updates, we should respect that for consistency at user end. Expect it's Windows, which is a unspecified mess anyway, let's go and unpack everything raw on C:\ or into user directory.
Hopefully that day is soon what with those 1-bit models I've been hearing about. I'd be all for that, but I'll be damned if I'll be putting an OpenAI key into my terminal lol.
Warp.dev! It’s the best terminal I’ve used so far, and the best use of AI as well! It’s extremely useful with some AI help for the thousands of small commands you know exist but rarely uses. And it’s very well implemented.
I don't understand what is the benefit here over a terminal with a good non-LLM based autocomplete. I understand that, theoretically, LLMs can produce better autocomplete, but idk if it is really that big of a difference with terminal commands. I guess its a small shortcut to have the AI there to ask questions, too. It's good to hear its well implemented, though.