unix_joe

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago (4 children)

LINE is the worst for spam though.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Trillian was just a UI that put all your contacts in the same window. You couldn't talk across protocols, or merge the same user contact across multiple protocols.

Think of Matrix as a unified protocol from which AIM, MSN, ICQ would have all been based. And so if someone is on AIM but you registered on MSN, you can still talk. And at the fundamental level, it looks like IRC. It is the opportunity to re-baseline everything on a standard that is open and supports end to end encryption.

So while bridges would be needed today, the idea is that some time in the future these services would re-baseline on the Matrix protocol, or be displaced for whatever market reason by a startup that chose to baseline on Matrix.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I am going to say the unspoken part out loud: it's rooted in Hitler's "Creators, Maintainers, Destroyers" view of race.

The fact that this article exists at all shows how deeply rooted the sentiment is, even if 95% of the people regurgitating it don't see themselves as racist or know that this is what their society has conditioned them to believe.

Asians only get tech by copying and stealing from the West. So when the "free market" West gets bothered by a little bit of competition and enforces protectionist measures, Asians who aren't willing to whore out their women to Westerners are supposed to come crawling back and accept sanctions as punishment for trying to be uppity. It's a shock to the system that China was able to keep innovating independently in a different direction, that can't easily be attributed to IP theft. It's not about the 7nm process; it's about the entire SoC.

There are a lot of dogwhistles and things left unspoken in these articles and TikTok videos (where I saw it first) and I'm sure the "well ackshually nobody ever said that" jackasses are ready to pounce on this comment so it's probably best to just leave it at this:

Unilateral protectionism has been a fucking disaster for consumers. All we got out of it was increased prices. A maxed out iPhone in 2016 cost $949. A maxed out iPhone in 2023 costs seventeen hundred fucking dollars and Samsung has done the same increase over that period. Less choice meant less competition and the duopoly was able to further entrench in their positions. This phone would be competitive with flagships at half the price. Why is that a bad thing?

[–] [email protected] 14 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Laptops: ThinkPad P-series. The repairability that the T-series used to have with slightly beefier specs and better heatsinks. Great for Linux.

Phones: FairPhone 4 (FP5 will likely be announced end of the month so wait for that) - user repairable, supports alternate operating systems, 7 years official OS support from FairPhone.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

They also only fight for privacy as a marketing differentiator from Google in the US. Their privacy stance varies from country to country.

If Apple had the same capability to harvest and mine user data as Google, there's no doubt in my mind they would already be doing so. Their inability to produce a viable cloud service and major security and update issues with iCloud imply it's a lack of ability and not any pro-user/privacy-oriented sentiment in the company.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 10 months ago

Yes, they are two separate things but both measured in Hertz.

Refresh rate is what manufacturers are hyping with 90Hz and 120Hz panels. That is how fast the elements on the screen are redrawn and is strictly a user interface issue.

PWM frequency is how fast the screen turns off and on, and is also measured in hertz.

It is possible to have a phone with a high refresh rate (120Hz) and also low frequency pwm (220Hz) that strains the eyes.

On mobile OLED displays, dimming is done by turning the entire display on and off very quickly (the individual pixels always stay at 100% brightness). This acts like a strobelight and can cause eye strain because your eyes are always adjusting to the change in brightness, even though your conscious brain doesn't see or register the flickering, or registers it in a different way. Some people don't notice it at all; others have trouble looking at the text because the words seem to wobble on the display.

Lots of things flicker, like LED lights, brake lights, the sun, but people don't spend 6 hours a day staring into the bulb lighting their bedroom like they stare into their screens.

Flicker is not an issue on most LCD phones or laptops made in the past 7-8 years. It is also not an issue when the OLED pwm frequency is increased to where the flickering happens so fast that it is imperceptible to the eye (as in, 1000Hz or more). This is what many new OnePlus and Xiaomi phones are doing, as well as some of the phones in the article.

 

If you experience eyestrain using an OLED phone, here are some newer devices that have higher frequency pwm.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 10 months ago (4 children)

The Protonmail client is okay.

Sometimes, it hangs and never shows the Inbox or takes a very long time to show your Inbox (several minutes). You have to clear your app cache when this happens and sign in again. You also don't get full access to settings. You cannot go in and add a new alias from the mobile app, or change payment options.

Fastmail is okay. My gripe is you can't use biometric security on Android and when you set custom color schemes on the web client, the app disregards them.

I use both. I used Fastmail since college when they were the big thing and they support and develop FOSS software. I migrated to ProtonMail out of curiosity after more than a decade, but when they turned over the IP address of a fucking CLIMATE ACTIVIST to police, I decided to halt that process and later on I renewed my domain with Fastmail out of convenience (other things that irked me were were the Proton Mail bridge didn't work on OpenBSD and I couldn't use it with alpine or K9 mail at the time). I keep ProtonMail for occasional registration/verification email that doesn't make it to Fastmail but I'm not under any illusion about protection under Swiss law.

I was so entrenched in Fastmail that I stayed with them because the annoyances with ProtonMail service didn't outweigh the benefits or price increase. If you are starting from scratch, I would probably go ProtonMail.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)
  • Asuna
  • Lord of the Test
  • 0 A.D.
  • Xbill
  • SuperTuxKart
  • Sonic Robo Blast
  • The various Doom mods
  • Konquest
  • SuperTux
  • Endless Sky
[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

This came out when I was still in elementary school. I remember at the time the computer guru people were like, "It's not a real computer, it doesn't even have a 3 1/2" floppy drive. How can it be a computer without a floppy disk?" And people bought into that sentiment because Apple of the 90s was a company with no new ideas that was almost dead.

From an LA Times article, "Wait, did I really say “no floppy”? I did. This is probably the biggest gamble. Third-party vendors will no doubt develop a floppy that will attach via one of the iMac’s universal serial bus ports for connecting peripheral devices. (USB is a successor to a range of ports used previously on PCs and Macs.) My guess is that Apple is wrong about home users--most will still want a floppy (or zip drive) and will have to buy an add-on."

I thought it was kind of neat to not have a floppy because even in those days 1.44MB was pathetically small and there were competing standards for a floppy replacement around 100-120MB range.

I think the biggest influence, besides killing off floppy drive was that this also killed beige PCs. Everybody shit on Apple for their new design but then in a few years they were all putting different colors on their cases and nobody had beige computers anymore.

I never got to use one until almost a decade later, in undergrad, where they were still in use at the kiosks for free internet in the student center. That's where I finally learned to despise the puck mouse.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 11 months ago

The Wikipedia article has a link that should always work.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Dropbox has the feature that lets me scan PDFs using the phone camera. It also doesn't need me to self-host.

Google Photos allows quick refinements to a photo and sharing all the pictures with someone's face in a gallery that they can then see, automatically.

I don't know any alternative to Snapseed on mobile, and there's barely anything as simple and polished on the desktop.

[–] [email protected] 39 points 11 months ago

It's a worse Mastodon, run by a company that celebrated election misinformation, leading to the storming of the Capitol, and who later helped police arrest a woman for abortion by turning over private messages she sent to another party. I hope it fails.

 

This is kind of the anti-distro hopping thread. How long have you stayed on a single Linux distribution for your main PC? What about servers?

I've been on Debian on and off since 2021, but finally committed to the platform since April of this year.

Before that I was on OpenBSD from 2011 - 2021 for my desktop.

Prior to that, FreeBSD for many years, followed by a few years of distro-hopping various Linux distros (Slackware, Arch, Fedora, simplyMEPIS, and ZenWalk from memory).

How long have you been on your distribution? Do we have anybody here who has been on their current distro for more than a decade?

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