Making games in many forms Daily logic puzzle: https://cluesbysam.com Ad free mobile games: https://games-by-sam.com Physical mystery puzzle magazine: https://cluehound.com Consulting: https://adartis.fi
Much of that is at least for my company handled by our accounting company. We just print the correct VAT on the invoice, and report the same VAT to the accountant and they take care of the rest. The shop/payment processor etc doesn't need to be integrated to any of it. Though I have to post-process Stripe's reports, as they refuse to include the used VAT rate in there, despite them knowing it. Stripe does try to sell the tax service to us, but I refuse.
I had the same question a few days ago here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47162828
I didn't receive an answer besides "that's what people like", but I still can't think of (m)any situations where anyone would prefer it.
I ask for code snippets, occasional recipes, translations... I don't have memory enabled. I start a new chat for each question. At times I ask things in different languages, if the question is tied to culture or location. If I notice I asked the wrong question, I start a new session instead of continuing the old one, so it doesn't try to merge the questions somehow.
I don't see any benefit in it knowing anything about me. Instead I'm usually quite vague to avoid biased answers.
I hear the claim that people already have their conversation on ChatGPT and can't move them. I'm curious, what are these discussions like? I've never continued an old discussion, I just start a new one every time I have a question. If the discussion is long, I often start a new chat to get a blank slate. My experience is that the chat history just causes confusion.
So I'm curious to understand: What are the discussions like that people go back to and would lose if they moved to another platform?
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