If this is useful, a ❤️ helps others find it. Everything I keep looking up when building Tauri v2 apps — in one place. // Define #[tauri::command] fn greet(name: String) -> String { format!("Hello, {}!", name) } // With error handling #[tauri::command] fn read_file(path: String) -> Result { std::fs::read_to_string(path).map_err(|e| e.to_string()) } // Async #[tauri::command] async fn fet
Hermes Agent from Nous Research is a model-agnostic, tool-using assistant you run locally or on a VPS. Hermes does not lock you into one surface. You can use the classic hermes / hermes chat CLI, the full-screen hermes --tui session, a long-running hermes gateway for Telegram, Discord, Slack, and other messaging platforms, hermes dashboard for a local browser UI when the web extra is installed.
If this is useful, a ❤️ helps others find it. Everything I keep looking up when building with Gemini — in one place. Model Context Best for gemini-2.5-flash-preview 1M tokens General use, thinking, fast gemini-2.5-pro-preview 1M tokens Complex reasoning, best quality gemini-1.5-flash 1M tokens Stable, production-ready gemini-1.5-pro 2M tokens Longest context gemini-2.0-flash-lite 1M
You have probably seen a file named “go.sum” in almost every Go project you have worked on. You may have even seen it change every time you run “go mod tidy”. But do you actually know what it does? It is one of those files that works silently in the background, and some developers never stop to think about it. The “go.sum” file is one of those files you never really interact with directly, but it