I’m sorry you live with so much gratuitous hatred in your heart and I pray you can recover some day.
Specter
If you know, you know.
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Specter@piefed.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•'It doesn’t catch fire': Why China’s "fireproof" sodium battery could be the breakthrough that makes EVs safer than ICE carsEnglish59·8 hours ago
Specter@piefed.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•'It doesn’t catch fire': Why China’s "fireproof" sodium battery could be the breakthrough that makes EVs safer than ICE carsEnglish119·9 hours agoActually it’s the other way around.
The internet is all about “China Bad” so calling it China Battery is a way to depreciate this obviously positive discovery.
Specter@piefed.socialto Hardware@lemmy.world•ASUS increases Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite laptop prices just hours after reviews go liveEnglish3·10 hours agoRight, especially now with Apple launching the Neo, is there even a reason to buy an ARM windows laptop? Imagine paying triple for an inferior experience with Microslop lol.
Specter@piefed.socialto Hardware@lemmy.world•ASUS increases Qualcomm Snapdragon X2 Elite laptop prices just hours after reviews go liveEnglish2·8 hours agoIs Qualcomm purposefully sabotaging their way into the laptop market? I don’t understand their logic here, it seems at every step they shoot themselves in the foot in a way that guarantees they’ll never be a relevant player.
Anyways, no Linux support so see you in 20 years if you’re still alive Qualcomm.
Specter@piefed.socialto Buy European@feddit.uk•What are your recent buy european wins?English1·21 hours agoI mean. There is Quobuz which is also French but actually only owned by French people.
Specter@piefed.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Testing suggests Google's AI Overviews tell millions of lies per hourEnglish2·1 day agoI am trying to get away from the philosophy actually 😅 in the end what matters is how these tools are being used, not so much their inherent characteristics.
Can you envision a world where AI chatbots will be used to lead you down certain political beliefs (e.g. capitalism good, socialism bad) product recommendations will be made based on how much brands are willing to pay for ad placements, and your psychological state will be measured and molded to the interests of the AI owner? I can. It’s also already happening.
Specter@piefed.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Testing suggests Google's AI Overviews tell millions of lies per hourEnglish5·1 day agoIt doesn’t really matter whether it’s the Machine or the creator.
The point is, AIs can be programmed to lie, much like Grok does. And if they can be programmed to lie, then they are not reliable for anything at all. We are going through a decent period where AI can be used for a few things reliably, but even these will surely be enshittified.
Specter@piefed.socialto Buy European@feddit.uk•What are your recent buy european wins?English71·2 days agoDeezer is owned by a Russian oligarch. Just something you might want to know about.
Great! Now you just have to ensure you stay at your job for at least 48 years so that this automation really starts to pay off!
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish1·2 days agoI… literally thought you were OP. But anyways I respect your decision. Have a nice day.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish1·3 days agoNot gonna lie I’m really struggling to sympathize with OP right now. People are trying to drag him out of the doom and gloom and OP just keeps moving the goal posts into a position that nobody can defend.
Frankly, this could be a post complaining about how Macbooks don’t support Windows. Yeah, they don’t, there are multiple options out there though that do, but OP is not interested in them. They want to go back to a time when stores sold hardware that they can no longer sell, and think this post can do it vengeance. Seriously it sounds like a Reddit post. I thought I ran away from there to avoid these types of posts but alas.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish1·3 days agoThe average person. I’m going to repeat that because apparently you missed it. The average person isn’t buying used computers from enterprise resellers.
The average person is most definitely buying second-hand laptops they can afford from Facebook Marketplace or similar, enterprise-grade or not.
It’s not about Linux not being supported. It’s about barrier to entry.
Linux inherently has a barrier of entry by virtue of having essentially zero manufacturers selling hardware that ships with Linux installed. However I don’t understand why you think price is a barrier of entry. If the majority of laptops are priced from 300 euros up to 4000 in some shops, then that’s what customers are willing to pay. I don’t mean now with the AI boom making everything more expensive either, I mean for the past few years this has been the market. Common people buy new from stores, or buy second-hand.
My mother is not buying and installing RAM. My mother would not know what to do if she had driver issues on Linux.
This issue is not specific to Linux. The used market is flooded with Windows laptops that no longer support windows 11 well due to only having 4-8 GB ram. Same with 8GB Macbooks.
I don’t know why you’re pretending that shopping for an older laptop model is only a problem for the average person if you want it to be Linux compatible. Also your grandmother doesn’t have to do anything. She, like the average person, can take her laptop to a repair shop for servicing and upgrading.
This said, you’re not the average person. You already went the extra mile by installing Linux on devices that don’t ship with from factory. Further, you’re specifically interested in small devices when the average person wants bigger screens, you want your device to be underpowered when the average person wants them as powerful as possible in a slim form factor without compromising on battery. Your rant has nothing to do with what the average person wants, your rant is, sorry to say, a completely self-absorved rant that just shows you’re mad your niche preferences aren’t supported by the Linux community, or the world consumer preferences as a whole.
“The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 years”
I mean honestly could this title be any more self-absorbed?
I would ask if you’re a Debian user (or use a Debian-derivative), but what even is the point when I already know the answer.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish2·3 days agoEverything you just said can be fixed by buying Thinkpads. All of them are supported because some companies use Linux at an enterprise level. Until those corporations disappear, Linux will never stop being supported on them. I see a lot of doom and gooom that is frankly unhelpful especially now that the Microslop monopoly is clearly breaking down and there is more potential for Linux than ever before.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish1·3 days agoYogas are supported by Linux AFAIK but touchscreens might be a problem.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@lemmy.world•The sacrifice of staying on Linux after 20 yearsEnglish5·3 days agoYou post is long but is not very clear, the commenter above is correct. What exactly is your grievance? That Linux does not support your ancient laptop? Or it does not support the laptops (let’s face it, tablets) that YOU want?
Unfortunately resources are scarce in the Linux community, so labor needs to be allocated where most people are (AKA using hardware from the last ~5-10 years, not 30). And Windows surface tablets are extremely locked down.
I’m sorry that you can’t find people who want to continue supporting hardware so old people get nostalgia when they hear its name (eg. Pentium i586). It seems to me you’re not willing to do it either.
Ultimately you’re reducing to hardware a phenomenon that also involves software. Realistically who can run modern computing operations (such as web browsering) on a laptop with 3-4 GB RAM? The answer is nobody. Not comfortably, at least. Browsers take easily 3GB of RAM with just a few tabs open.
As for all laptops being bulky… this is the consumer preference. I don’t like it either but we can barely fault manufacturers for producing what consumers want to buy. I see this trend on phones as well, for me smaller phones are the best thing but the market moved towards bigger screens, heavier phones. And you want underpowered devices? If you could have a slim and lightweight laptop/tablet, wouldn’t you want it to be as powerful as possible? This doesn’t make any sense from a consumer perspective.
Lastly, if you want whatever machine you buy to last longer, then ironically you should learn a thing or two about hardware so that you can replace parts yourself. You don’t have to become a genius, just follow some steps on YouTube on how to change RAM, add SSDs… and yes, Thinkpads especially older ones are great for this since many parts are non-soldered. Apparently this year they are also launching a new one that is way easier to open up and replace parts with their removable keyboard.
Specter@piefed.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Firm quietly boosts H.264 streaming license fees from $100,000 up to staggering $4.5 million — backbone codec of the internet gets meteoric increase, AVC hikes follow disastrous H.265 licensing increaEnglish5·4 days agout could just be outplayed by a big corporation with enough money to copy this idea and sell it everywhere before he can even start production.
Which is also why Anti-Trust laws exist in pretty much every country and, when enforced, actually stop companies from becoming gargantuan Hydras.
In the US they haven’t been implemented for too long, of course.
Gotcha 😄👍 and that’s probably the main thing these days. We might not be able to protect our data from these corps but we can at least move our money and attention away from them.
Man I don’t know if this is a parody but you’re inconveniencing yourself to an extreme that doesn’t make any sense especially when the EU is in negotiations to happily hand out all our biometric data to the US anyway.
I am all for privacy but let’s be honest it is a total sham nowadays. Go de-google to your hearts content, i did the same and I couldn’t be happier (you just get treated better when you’re not the product, funnily enough), just understand you’re not really protecting yourself from anything when governments can, and do, just negotiate your data behind your back anyway.
Specter@piefed.socialto Linux@programming.dev•What are the more obscure independent linux distros?English3·4 days agoLove nixOS (my daily driver) but I wouldn’t call it obscure. It seems to be becoming as popular as Arch for people interested in experimental distros.
Nice argument you’re having with yourself there, buddy. Seems like you have quite a lot to pour out.
I don’t have any affinity for China, but I also don’t like the gratuitous hate they get all over the internet, nor the reduction of Chinese people’s experience to work drones (what you’re doing).
I had hoped that Lemmy wasn’t gonna be like that, but alas.