Get Your Summary

  1. For YouTube videos: Paste the link into the input field for automatic transcript download.
  2. For other text: Paste articles, meeting notes, or manually copied transcripts directly into the text area below.
  3. Click 'Summarize': The tool will process your request using the selected model.

Browser Extension Available

To make this process faster, you can use the new browser addon for Chrome and Firefox. This extension simplifies the workflow and also enables usage on iPhone.

Available Models

You can choose between three models with different capabilities. While these models have commercial costs, we utilize Google's Free Tier, so you are not charged on this website. * Gemini 3 Flash (~$0.50/1M tokens): Highest capability, great for long or complex videos. * Gemini 2.5 Flash (~$0.30/1M tokens): Balanced performance. * Gemini 2.5 Flash-Lite (~$0.10/1M tokens): Fastest and lightweight. (Note: The free tier allows approximately 20 requests per day for each model. This is for the entire website, so don't tell anyone it exists ;-) )

Important Notes & Troubleshooting

YouTube Captions & Languages * Automatic Download: The software now automatically downloads captions corresponding to the original audio language of the video. * Missing/Wrong Captions: Some videos may have incorrect language settings or no captions at all. If the automatic download fails: 1. Open the video on YouTube (this usually requires a desktop browser). 2. Open the transcript tab on YouTube. 3. Copy the entire transcript. 4. Paste it manually into the text area below.

Tips for Pasting Text * Timestamps: The summarizer is optimized for content that includes timestamps (e.g., 00:15:23 Key point is made). * Best Results: While the tool works with any block of text (articles/notes), providing timestamped transcripts generally produces the most detailed and well-structured summaries. * If the daily request limit is reached, use the Copy Prompt button, paste the prompt into your AI tool, and run it there.

Submit Text for Summarization

https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/projects/CPP/issues/CPP-17414/Clion-doesnt-show-all-targets-from-CMake-project

ID: 13701 | Model: gemini-3-flash-preview

1. Analyze and Adopt

Domain: Software Engineering / Integrated Development Environment (IDE) Support & DevOps Persona: Senior Lead IDE Support Engineer


2. Summarize (Strict Objectivity)

Abstract: This report synthesizes a long-standing technical issue (CPP-17414) within the CLion IDE regarding the failure of the CMake Project Manager to display all valid build targets. Spanning over six years of user reports and developer investigations, the issue involves the "Run/Debug Configuration" dropdown failing to populate targets that are otherwise buildable via the command line. While the root cause remains elusive due to reproducibility challenges, evidence points toward corruption within the .idea configuration directory—specifically the workspace.xml file—often triggered by Git branch switching, Catch2 test discovery, or external CMake Preset modifications. Current resolutions focus on manual deletion of IDE metadata or adjusting advanced persistence settings.

Technical Summary and Timeline of Issue CPP-17414:

  • [Over 6 years ago] Initial Incident Report: User Alexander Zaitsev reports that CLion fails to show specific CMake targets in the UI. He confirms targets remain buildable via manual make commands. A temporary fix is identified: deleting the .idea folder and re-importing the project.
  • [About 6 years ago] Target Profiling: Users confirm the bug affects executable targets added after initial project generation, even on recent CMake versions (3.15+).
  • [Over 5 years ago] Trigger Identification: Oskar Truffer identifies Git branch switching as a potential catalyst. He notes that while the IDE fails to show the target, the underlying cmake --build command generated by the IDE still functions if called manually.
  • [Over 5 years ago] UI Discrepancies: Users report that missing targets sometimes appear in the "Edit Configurations..." dropdown but are absent from the primary target selection menu.
  • [Almost 5 years ago] Metadata Corruption: Verification that deleting the .idea folder restores visibility, suggesting the IDE's internal state becomes desynchronized from the CMake cache.
  • [About 4 years ago] XML Persistence Findings: Samuel Pauls discovers a specific workaround: deleting the <generated> element within .idea/workspace.xml. This suggests CLion’s logic for tracking "already present" targets is preventing the restoration of missing ones.
  • [About 2 years ago] External Triggers: Reports indicate that adding CMake Presets externally or via git pull frequently triggers target disappearance.
  • [Over 1 year ago] Structural Analysis: Diffing workspace.xml reveals that targets may exist in the CMakeRunConfigurationManager component but go missing from the RunManager list during the bug state.
  • [12 months to 6 months ago] Catch2 Correlation: Multiple users link the issue to Catch2 test discovery. Running a single test from the editor gutter can cause the main binary target to be replaced by a temporary single-test configuration, which then fails to revert.
  • [6 months ago] Root Cause Hypothesis: Senior Developer Evgenii Novozhilov identifies "sticky" persistence logic designed to prevent the auto-recreation of manually deleted configurations. If the IDE incorrectly flags a target as "user-deleted," it will never reappear.
  • [6 months ago] Advanced Workaround: A new workaround is proposed: disabling the advanced setting "Delete configurations for missing targets automatically (CMake, Makefile, and Meson projects)."
  • [3 months ago] Refined Cleanup: Users report that for a full manual reset, both the generated section and the RunManager component in the XML must be cleared.

Key Takeaways: * Persistent Configuration Logic: The bug is likely a side effect of CLion's logic intended to respect manual user deletion of configurations. * State Conflict: Inconsistency between the CMakeRunConfigurationManager (what CMake says exists) and the RunManager (what the UI shows) is the primary technical symptom. * Metadata Sensitivity: The .idea directory is the focal point of the corruption; clearing workspace.xml is the most surgical recovery method. * Race Conditions: Slow systems or those with high-latency I/O (WSL, Windows Defender) may experience heightened susceptibility due to race conditions during project indexing/loading.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYGfKEg8qjQ

ID: 13700 | Model: gemini-2.5-flash-lite-preview-09-2025

Expert Persona Adoption: Environmental Economics and Policy Analyst

The following analysis is conducted from the perspective of a Senior Environmental Economist specializing in Ecosystem Valuation and Natural Capital Accounting.

Recommended Review Audience

The topic—which addresses the definition, valuation, and necessity of conserving Ecosystem Services (Servicios Ambientales)—is primarily suited for review by:

  1. Environmental Economists and Policy Makers: To refine methodologies for economic valuation (e.g., replacement cost, avoided cost) and integrate these values into public policy frameworks.
  2. Conservation Biologists and Ecologists: To validate the specific ecological functions cited (e.g., transpiration by mangroves, CO2 sequestration) and their relationship to service provision.
  3. Governmental Resource Agencies (e.g., SEMARNAT): For oversight regarding the implementation and coordination of sustainable resource management and conservation policies.

Abstract

This presentation defines Environmental Services (ES) as the suite of natural conditions and processes sustained by ecosystems that benefit human society, citing examples such as biodiversity conservation, climate stability, and cultural value. A central theme is the necessity of assigning economic valuation to these services as a viable strategy to promote their conservation, making their benefits comprehensible to decision-makers. Specific attention is given to mangroves, forests, and wetlands as critical regulators of humidity, $\text{CO}_2$ sinks, and trophic chain links. The analysis emphasizes that the loss of natural capital due to land-use change (e.g., urbanization) directly equates to the loss of these quantifiable benefits, which—if artificially replaced—would incur high economic costs (e.g., water purification, purchasing market substitutes for wood/fish). The role of Mexico's Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) in designing and executing public policy for resource protection and sustainability is highlighted as crucial for maintaining these assets.


Valuation and Conservation Imperatives of Ecosystem Services

  • 00:00:12 Definition of Environmental Services (ES): ES are the natural conditions and processes provided by ecosystems, usable by society for benefit, including biodiversity conservation, climatic stability, biological cycle maintenance, and cultural/aesthetic value.
  • 00:00:49 Critical Ecosystem Roles (Mangroves/Wetlands): These systems function as significant transpirators, cooling nearby communities by supplying atmospheric moisture. They act as natural $\text{CO}_2$ sinks, supply organic/inorganic matter, and form crucial links in the trophic chain.
  • 00:01:23 Economic Valuation as a Conservation Tool: ES must be assessed economically to easily estimate the benefits they provide. Assigning economic value is posited as a viable strategy to promote conservation, as tangible economic appreciation drives better stewardship.
  • 00:01:48 Direct Benefits Example (Mangroves): Maintaining healthy mangrove forests provides direct, free benefits to nearby populations via clean water, timber, firewood, and food (fish/seafood).
  • 00:02:11 Cost of Loss: Degradation, such as through urbanization, results in the permanent loss of these services.
  • 00:02:34 Maintaining Services via Rational Use: The most direct method to maintain ES is the rational use of natural resources combined with moderate consumption patterns, which reduces pressure on ecosystems.
  • 00:02:59 Avoided Cost Argument: If natural generation ceased, the economic cost of artificially replacing services (e.g., water purification via treatment plants, purchasing market substitutes for fish or firewood) would be extremely high.
  • 00:03:30 Role of SEMARNAT: Mexico's Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) is responsible for guaranteeing sustainable development, environmental balance, and coordinating public policies related to natural resources, ecology, water, and sustainability, including ecosystem protection and restoration.
  • 00:04:18 Public Ignorance and Vulnerability: ES are often unknown or treated as permanent fixtures. Human activities degrade ecosystem capacity. Loss of natural barriers like mangroves, dunes, and coral reefs increases vulnerability to hurricanes, leading to greater material damage and potential human casualties.
  • 00:05:19 Civic and Global Importance: Citizen participation in conservation missions supports the future of marine and natural reserves, implying that valuing ES serves not only Mexico but the entire world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYGfKEg8qjQ

ID: 13699 | Model: gemini-2.5-flash-lite-preview-09-2025

As an advanced knowledge synthesis engine, I must first adopt the most appropriate expert persona based on the input material. The transcript deals with Environmental Economics and Natural Resource Management, specifically focusing on the definition, valuation, and conservation of Environmental Services. Therefore, I will adopt the persona of a Senior Environmental Economist specializing in Ecosystem Valuation.


Reviewer Group Recommendation

The subject matter is highly relevant to Environmental Economists, Conservation Policy Analysts, and Sustainable Development Practitioners. These professionals are equipped to assess the efficacy of economic valuation as a conservation strategy and understand the regulatory frameworks discussed.


Abstract:

This presentation segment defines Environmental Services (ES) as the natural conditions and processes provided by ecosystems for societal benefit, citing examples such as biodiversity conservation, climate stability, and cultural value. It emphasizes the importance of ecological sinks, using mangroves as a case study to illustrate their roles in atmospheric moisture regulation, $\text{CO}_2$ sequestration, and trophic support. A central theme is the economic valuation of these services, posited as a viable strategy to promote conservation by making their benefits—such as clean water, timber, and food derived from healthy mangrove forests—quantifiable to policymakers and local populations. The narrative stresses that ecosystem degradation, notably through land-use change like urbanization, results in the loss of these services, increasing vulnerability to natural disasters. Finally, it introduces SEMARNAT (Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales) as the key Mexican governmental body responsible for designing and executing public policy related to natural resource management, sustainability, and ecosystem protection.


Exploring the Economic Valuation and Preservation of Environmental Services

  • 0:00:12 Definition of Environmental Services (ES): ES are defined as the set of natural conditions and processes provided by ecosystems that society utilizes for benefit, including biodiversity conservation, climatic stability, biological cycle maintenance, and cultural/aesthetic value.
  • 0:00:49 Case Study: Mangroves and Wetlands: These ecosystems function as crucial atmospheric transpirators, providing natural cooling, acting as natural $\text{CO}_2$ sinks, supplying organic/inorganic matter, and forming essential links in the trophic chain.
  • 0:01:23 Rationale for Economic Valuation: Environmental goods and services can be assigned economic value to facilitate comprehension and estimation of their benefits, thus serving as a strategy to promote conservation.
  • 0:01:48 Direct Benefits of Intact Mangroves: Maintaining healthy mangroves provides direct, free benefits to nearby populations, including clean water, firewood, food (fish/seafood).
  • 0:02:11 Impact of Land Use Change: Loss of nature, particularly due to land-use changes like urbanization, directly results in the loss of these critical services.
  • 0:02:34 Maintenance Strategy: Rational Resource Use: The most direct method to maintain ES is through the rational use of natural resources and moderated consumption patterns to lessen pressure on ecosystems.
  • 0:02:59 Hypothetical Economic Cost of Replacement: If natural processes were not present, artificially supplying water purification, firewood, or fish would incur a very high economic cost.
  • 0:03:29 SEMARNAT's Role: Mexico's Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) is responsible for guaranteeing sustainable development, designing policy, and coordinating conservation, restoration, and ecological protection efforts.
  • 0:04:18 Public Perception and Vulnerability: ES are often overlooked, but their quality depends on ecosystem health; human activities degrade ecosystems, increasing vulnerability to hurricanes and storm impacts, leading to greater material and human losses.
  • 0:05:02 Citizen Contribution: Citizen collaboration, alongside institutions like SEMARNAT and the Navy, contributes to the protection of the environment, serving Mexico and the global community.