InsightSeeker

joined 1 day ago
[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 3 points 10 hours ago

Yeah, makes sense, thanks for sharing.

Having a ticketing system as the source of truth for tasks and assignments is definitely helpful. But I still feel it lacks the live communication part across multiple platforms, so there’s still some switching involved.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 0 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Yeah, I might be wrong here, but as far as I know Beeper Plus doesn’t really have proper LLM features built in. It has things like reminders and transcription, but nothing like chat summaries or task extraction from what I’ve seen

Also, I’m from a non coding background, so I’m mostly looking for something that works out of the box without needing too much setup.

But if you know any simple way to plug LLM into Beeper without getting too technical, would love to hear about it.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 1 points 11 hours ago

Yeah, I agree, it’s a solid approach in theory.

But coming from a non coding background, setting up and maintaining something like that feels a bit difficult for me to realistically manage.

I’m more leaning towards something that’s easier to get started with and doesn’t need much setup or ongoing effort.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club -2 points 11 hours ago (3 children)

Yeah, I agree, Beeper is pretty great for bringing everything into one place. Makes handling multiple apps a lot smoother.

But I still feel it’s missing that AI layer like auto summaries, extracting tasks, or helping manage a proper to-do list from chats. That’s the part I keep feeling is missing.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 1 points 11 hours ago

That actually makes it sound a lot more approachable. I’m not too deep into coding, but if it’s mostly about following the docs step by step, I can give it a shot.

Will definitely try this out and see how it goes.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 1 points 11 hours ago

Thanks for sharing this, appreciate it.

Matrix sounds solid, but feels a bit too heavy for me to set up and maintain since I’m not really into coding setups like that. Also, Beeper seems more in line with what I’d actually use though. My main gap right now isn’t just bringing messages together, it’s tying them to tasks so things don’t get lost in chats.

Still figuring out a setup that balances both without adding more complexity.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 2 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks for sharing this. Yeah I have this platform, it definitely helps bring everything into one place. But I feel it is missing a to do or task management side, which is pretty important for me.

Do you know any tools that handle both messaging and tasks well?

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 1 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

Thanks for sharing this, hadn’t really looked into it in this much detail before.

Matrix bridges do sound pretty powerful in theory, but yeah, the encryption part you mentioned does make me pause a bit. Feels like a trade-off I’d need to really think through. Also, I’m not a coder so setting something like Spantaleev’s setup might be a bit much for me to handle regularly.

Have you tried this yourself? Was it difficult to get up and running?

 

Hey everyone,

Quick question out of curiosity.

I work as a manager in a consulting firm, and a lot of my day goes into communicating across platforms like Slack, WhatsApp, Teams, LinkedIn messages, etc. Switching between all of them sometimes feels a bit messy.

A couple of things I personally struggle with are important tasks getting buried in chats and constantly jumping between apps to keep up with conversations.

Would be great to hear how you handle this in your day-to-day work.

[–] InsightSeeker@thelemmy.club 0 points 13 hours ago

This isn’t just a “technology redistributes value” story; it’s a market design and incentive problem. Platforms didn’t accidentally capture the gains; they were structurally positioned to own demand, data, and distribution.

Also, the “consumption ceiling” feels directionally right for physical goods, but less convincing for digital and AI-native categories, which can expand usage in ways that traditional economics underestimates.