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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: February 13th, 2025

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  • Every technology shift creates winners and losers.

    There’s already documented harm from algorithms making callous biased decisions that ruin people’s lives - an example is automated insurance claim rejections.

    We know that AI is going to bring algorithmic decisions into many new places where it can do harm. AI adoption is currently on track to get to those places well before the most important harm reduction solutions are mature.

    We should take care that we do not gaslight people who will be harmed by this trend, by telling them they are better off.



  • Amazon - the logistics company - is just a front end for (and leech on) various drop shippers, lately, anyway.

    Amazon used to carry quality guarantees, and have meaningful reviews, but lately the wild West crapshoot of the rest of the web is just as good.

    (And at least on the rest of the web I have some idea who I’m buying from, and can avoid them after a bad experience. On Amazon, it got to where there was no way I could tell.)




  • Most KDE apps will run on Gnome and vice-versa, but they might not run particularly well under those conditions.

    I used to run into issues with this all the time. Recently, I find, for poplar apps, there’s always a version built for my chosen desktop environment.

    Of course, I’m not very picky, anymore: Libre-this, Open-that, Free-Whatever. I usually find the one that comes up in the app search is good enough for what I’m doing.


  • I feel like linux demands an understanding of the relationship between hardware and software more than windows does.

    Yes, when we install Linux on something that didn’t ship with Linux installed.

    But in an apples to apples scenario - pre-installed OS provided by the manufacturer, it’s Windows that comes with more bullshit.

    And there are (finally!) plenty of options to buy a pre-installed Linux computer, today.

    It’s a tiny fraction as many as pre-installed Windows or Mac, of course. But it’s still plenty. There’s a half dozen companies with solid reremovedtions and hardware specialties, and I only need one.






  • I’m a developer, so my chances are pretty good. But I take your point.

    Even if I weren’t, there’s enough software options out there that I don’t have to pick between paying for proprietary software and living with abandonware.

    So I think the need for this security is exaggerated.

    Of course. I used proprietary software for a long time. Having things I relied on get abandoned got old, but it worked.

    I just expect more from most of my software, now.






  • Oof. Sorry you had such a bad experience.

    Pro tip for others: It takes time for volunteers to reverse engineer new proprietary laptop hardware.

    If the laptop manufacturers aren’t advertising Linux support, it’s up to the community to play guess and check, to figure out what the proprietary drivers do.

    You might get lucky and pick the same exact model as a passionate reverse engineer. Or you might not.

    With old stuff, your odds are much better that someone has figured it out for you.

    For new hardware, it’s still essential to pick a vendor that chooses to write and release Linux drivers.

    This will get better when truly open hardware platforms gain popularity.




  • That you can have multiple terminal panes open to accomplish a small portion of the above?

    Yes. Obviously. Two conclusions available to you are, either CLI developers are idiots, or they have tools you are unaware of.

    The answer to “how can anyone work this way?” is out there, if you’re really interested.