I'm not sure I care very much about which piece of software is a "product" or not (I have no qualms with devs asking for money), but I definitely agree that calling a piece of software "modern" actually carries negative connotations nowadays. I think most would agree that apps developed within the last 4 years are often more resource-intensive and slower than the equivalents from 15+ years ago.
Warp looks really cool as a tool and I intend to try it as soon as it's available on Linux, but it was pretty bold of them to include outgoing network requests by default before presenting directly to HN. I saw the post about "everything is opt in, where 'everything' means 'sending terminal contents'" - as if people read privacy policies before trying out a new dev tool.
Warp looks really cool as a tool and I intend to try it as soon as it's available on Linux, but it was pretty bold of them to include outgoing network requests by default before presenting directly to HN. I saw the post about "everything is opt in, where 'everything' means 'sending terminal contents'" - as if people read privacy policies before trying out a new dev tool.