I think MCP could totally evolve to support the same features A2A offers. Most of what A2A does feels like it could be layered onto MCP with some extensions — especially around auth, discovery, and out-of-band handling. If MCP maintainers are paying attention, they'd probably just adopt the good bits. Wouldn’t be surprised to see some convergence.
I'm also doing that but to develop side projects instead of playing games or reading news, it's an effective way to spent in transit / before sleeping, waiting on lines, in boring talks etc etc
I'm using
Keep notes - for crafting the issues and bugs I want to fix, reshaping the solution
ChatGPT -
Copy shortcuts - I'm able to copy various parts of the application and sent to ChatGPT (file path, code...) and then after the code I'm writing my plans. asking to tell what to change
Neovim - with many great shortcuts to make life easier, copying and pasting specific parts, quick save, run python scripts, the tree navigation and search is awesome, git plugins as well
Fastapi & Vue - I'm running on my phone the Web app and debugging it with pdb
Kiwi browser - has great debug tools
Termux of course
Git - pushing to a repo and it's being deployed to vercel
it's great when I find small bugs in the app when I'm using it, i can fix it right away without opening laptop
Happens to me as well. when I'm turning on my wireless headphones and trying to match with my phone, the closed macbook is connecting to it first. this is annoying and requires me either to:
1. pair from scratch
2. go to the macbook, open it, turn off bluetooth.
the problem is ads. there will always be people who will try to promote their results, and it will somehow arrive to ChatGPT. there will be chatGPT SEO, people will try to promote their answers so that ChatGPT will chose these answers.
Think of "what's the best pizza in NY" - SEO would pollute the web with hundreds of different articles which places Pizza Foo as #1, and those articles probably be scanned by OpenGPT.
The good part here is that you might be able to optimize your query like "what's the best pizza in NY, based on /r/pizza subreddit? exclude bots (based on their karma reputation)"
A suggestion for those who do not have time to write: record yourself.
use the time when you commute, when driving, when walking the dogs, cleaning, or anything ritual you're doing on daily basis. just tap the recorder in your phone and start talking about topics that bothers your mind during the day.
I'm maintaining a recording diary, and I'm talking about everything. It's helping me to be more confident on some ideas I want to share with others, to be more prepared to arguments with my wife, and to understand better myself - what I'm thinking about situations, why I'm doing things that I don't like and what I can do about that.
You can as well use it as retrospective analysis. we won't remember 99.9% of the things we did in our life. those recordings can help you in few years, you can extract the data from them and have a easy way to listen / read things you've said 1-2 years ago on some topics and see how you've evolved since then.
Same here. I completely blocked myself from accessing to YouTube on my smartphone and MacBook, just because of the shorts. This stuff is so addictive that I couldn't avoid it in my free time for dozens of minutes every single time I've opened youtube.
Perhaps too late for you unless you open a new account, but I seriously recomend everyone here to never ever click on a YouTube short while logged in.
YouTube will proceed to show that content down your throat and if you are like most people you will let it. It will make your experience miserable though.