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CarbonScored [any]
CarbonScored [any] @ CarbonScored @hexbear.net
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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • For techy people, sure. But in 90% of cases, people moving from Windows are looking for as little a paradigm-shift as they have to endure. I'm sure most regular Linux-users wouldn't disagree that other distros are cool, but telling someone "use this thing it's literally nothing like anything you know" is not going to get many takers from the population of people who just want their tech to do everyday stuff.

  • Websites worked fine before ads, and they would work well again without them. Doubly so now that crowdfunding is a common method to support things people actually want.

  • Honestly as a power user for 10 years I very, very rarely come across a time it's a good idea to touch anything outside the home directory.

  • You mean the conflict that literally started with the people of Donetsk and Luhansk taking up arms against a government that was explicitly shutting down their language and implementing outright oppressive laws against their ethnicities?

  • FWIW, if you're in Europe, you have guaranteed rights to refund online purchases within a timeframe. I'm assuming they've factored that in, but worth knowing if not.

  • This is our purpose after all

  • No? I've already said what it's about, and I'm not eager to repeat myself 'cause I feel vague meanyness.

  • It's not about a lack of features.

  • We essentially have three different browsers, that definitively isn't "lots and lots". Every year they get together and agree on what measures can be foisted upon all users with or without their support. The rest are very little more than reskins of each other.

  • Install Firefox with default settings > Look at your new tab page. They're all sponsored ads.

    Firefox on mobile collects data and sends it off for marketing purposes, this can't be turned off.

  • Forces ads in my face via Firefox. Sometimes promotes commercial control of the internet. Is borderline for-profit at this stage with all the moneygrubbing and issues that comes with.

    Don't get me wrong, they're the best of the lot by a long long way, but they're still problematic.

  • To be honest, I think the internet is in desperate need of an alternative to the Chrome/Mozilla/Safari trio. Why can I can no longer get a browser that doesn't shove ads in my face and/or track my every move?

    I know this isn't being designed as a browser for everyone. But I'm pleased to see making a web browser isn't an un-enterable area yet.

  • Heck yeah. I may give this a go.

    Thanks to the weirdo redditor for inadvertently advertising this thread via our modlog.

  • Wayland is the fancy new standard that never seems to stably work for me on any of my machines :( Thanks for letting me revert to X in the login screen, GNOME.

  • I wonder if they exclude the bottom 20% because debt often makes their wealth negative. I'd assume that'd mean the top 1% have more wealth than at least the bottom ~85%.

  • In fairness, I did quite like the suggestion to just remove division and subtraction! One that should be taken to heart :)

  • A fair criticism. Though I think the hating on PEDMAS (or BODMAS as I was taught) is pretty harsh, as it very much does represent parts of the standard of reading mathematical notation when taught correctly. At least I personally was taught its true form was a vertical format:

    B

    O

    DM

    AS

    I'd also say it's problematic to rely on calculators to implement or demonstrate standards, they do have their own issues.

    But overall, hey, it's cool. The world needs more passionate criticisms of ambiguous communication turning into a massive interpration A vs interpretation B argument rather than admitting "maybe it's just ambiguous".

  • Forward three hours, me using thesaurus.com to try fit the whole gist of my change into the first line.

  • TL;DR: It'll use a new, more secure key type.

  • Much love and empathy, comrade.