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Joined 21 days ago
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Cake day: March 25th, 2025

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  • How’s aurora for a beginner?

    I’m currently using Linux Mint and I’m happy, but the limitations are starting to show their bare teeth. I am planning to buy a tuxedo laptop soon and I fear with the new hardware Linux Mint will be a hindrance with their outdated packages, so I’m considering a fedora-based distro.

    Any info you’d like to share? I’m not a developer, just a regular user looking to use Linux as a daily driver.








  • Yes, this has been my point exactly! People are getting too lost in the sauce, not realising dropping their usage of 100% US products/services, to 50% US products/services, that’s already a huge damage to their profits.

    Bonus points if the other 50% can become EU consumption, because then you’re also enriching our common block. Take your time, reduce your US dependency one app at a time, and you’ll be surprised by how quickly you reach 60-80% EU products (where I’m at currently).

    The more of us start trying EU only products, the more complete our availability of other products will become. Our own version of Visa/MasterCard is already in development, and hopefully we’ll soon have some reliable alternatives to AWS and Azure too.





  • It requires opt-in,

    Because GDPR requires it to be so. Ask people overseas if they can turn that feature off.

    With the current government they have in the US, is this really something that the anybody should be comfortable having?

    Also, nothing is stopping malware from turning it on without your consent, because the technology will be backed in into the OS by default.

    and if someone nefarious gets to the point they can read this stuff then they’ll already be able to record your screen, log keystrokes, etc

    So we should just ignore that Microsoft just created a new attack vector that nobody asked for?

    I expect it won’t be straightforward to view the data as well, it’s not just gonna be a folder full of jpegs.

    Source?

    I’m glad that people are actually trying to make interesting features still.

    What’s interesting about this? Not only are you training AI models using your data without getting paid for it, I don’t understand what use case you can have by asking Microsoft what porn you were watching at 2 am of February 19th. For important stuff that needs remembering, you can just go back to your browser history. Its easier to search there than to remember the specific time you were doing something anyway.

    Literally, nobody wants this.

    OSs have been so boring years now, it’s good to see people actually trying to introduce standout features even if they are controversial. More of this I say.

    Okay so this is that mindset that seems to permeate the Tech industry through and through, these days. The idea that things that are working fine, need to be forcefully “improved” even when it’s not necessary.

    A pen can’t just be a pen anymore, it needs to connect to the cloud so that the ink levels can be properly measured and new ink sent to you on a subscription basis to make sure you never run out of ink.

    A juicer needs its own proprietary juice bags and it won’t work with different ones, and how does it know you’re not using the brand’s originals? Why, it must be connected to the internet of course, otherwise it won’t juice.

    Your car can’t just be a car anymore, it needs to have integrated mics and an internet connection so that the manufacturer can listen to all your calls and ear your sex sounds, and then sell that to advertisers who will know whether they should sell you a MagicWand or fisting lube, based on whether the moaning sounds they heard coming out of your car sound masculine or feminine.

    So on and so forth.

    You might think your take is unique, but it really isn’t. It aligns perfectly with everything that companies want nowadays, which is to get your data at all costs.

    For me, I want none of that shit. To the point that I go out of my way to make sure I only buy stuff that doesn’t connect to the internet.

    Which, BTW, this is the privacy community, I thought there was a common understanding of how abusing these features are, but I guess not.





  • the recent changes only reduces the visibility of ongoing changes and the ability for developers outside of OEMs to contribute to Android (such contributions were already rare).

    Why is this so underplayed as if it’s nearly meaningless though, is my question? A huge part of open source code is transparency, and this decision is a big blow to exactly that.

    Only posting the code when it’s finished increases the risk that it will not be correctly scrutinized in the way its been until now, not to mention the precedent this sets. Death of the OS in AOSP by a thousand shallow cuts is what I see here.



  • There’s no way to believe that phones have less cultural push than AM radio had pre-1990.

    I mean, you can believe whatever you want, but the answer is yes there is.

    You should watch the series Adolescence, btw. It deals with this exact topic. Its 4 episodes long and it shows how social media and constant connection and more importantly INTERACTION with everyone, has an effect that is fundamentally different from passively listening to AM radio.


  • Don’t get me wrong, I have Grayjay installed, and it works flawlessly. Seems to work even better than Tubular which is what I use currently.

    This is my only gripe (well, and the fact that it isn’t open source, but I can live with that), and I really want the project to succeed. I just can’t get past the perma dark mode, but I’ll stay on the lookout for when it releases a light mode, and I’ll start using it then because I really want the project to succeed.