I've never used proxmox, but I've heard good things. Personally (and this is a bit crazy) the best bar none interface for containers I've used is the OpenMediaVault compose plugin - it's a NAS distro but I literally ran it on all my servers for years because of the UI
TrueNAS is also a NAS distribution and it has pretty good support for containers and VMs, so I’m not that surprised. They generally expect to be individual all-in-one type of servers.
tbh copy paste the github link and ask an agent for a nix package. you may have to do some prompt engineering but usually done in less than 10 ish mins
Its actually a pretty good idea/framework for writing commit descriptions, especially for smaller changes that don't have any nuances to note in the commit
Why only small changes tho? I think it can also work with larger changes if you commit more regularly. And with agentic coding or even with autonomous agentic coding, you need to do it regularly and create these contextual checkpoints, no?
Even Gemini 2.5 was extremely snarky. I basically disable all guardrails via prompts and instructions, and it started getting snippy at me for apparently acting like a know-it-all.
Despite skills being just a new form of memory and context engineering for an agent, I think the framework is still great for agents to self-develop, given a good prompt to regularly review their own sessions and pick learning points to save as skills. In fact, I think the "craft" of prompt engineering has been lost somewhat - I still enjoy puzzling out and iterating over the best possible starting prompt for a conversation to get the best result I can for a one-shot
FWIW I didn't read the paper and am judging it based on its title, which I think is fair because "self-generated agent skills" is a pretty loose definition.