Productivity tools built on LLMs (or regexes) manipulating structured text might well provide a better UX (and of course, have the potential to be more private) than current proprietary web-based tool services (ie google calendar, todoist, etc). Local tools may interface with such services when necessary via APIs.
I’ve heard that LLMs have an easier time processing XML than idiosyncratically-formatted text. Maybe it is a good time to learn to write in XML? Or to acquire the habit of using XML by default for personal structured data management / productivity stuff (eg calendars, todo lists, personal CRMs)? Or to at least install an XML extension in your IDE / editor of choice?
Productivity tools built on LLMs (or regexes) manipulating structured text might well provide a better UX (and of course, have the potential to be more private) than current proprietary web-based tool services (ie google calendar, todoist, etc). Local tools may interface with such services when necessary via APIs.
I’ve heard that LLMs have an easier time processing XML than idiosyncratically-formatted text. Maybe it is a good time to learn to write in XML? Or to acquire the habit of using XML by default for personal structured data management / productivity stuff (eg calendars, todo lists, personal CRMs)? Or to at least install an XML extension in your IDE / editor of choice?