Skip Navigation

User banner
Posts
59
Comments
134
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Not sure what you mean by management, or which aspect of management? The issue was more about acceptance of community enhancements through the open source code project. Some contributors felt they could move faster with more diverse enhancements. It may be something like the LibreOffice fork from OpenOffice, where some wanted to just move faster with changes.

  • You should only see who you follow. For example I put zero on Nostr about crypto. My interests are general tech.

  • Thanks for that extra info - yes not much of that detail was on their site. Nostr has been around a bit longer I use it daily (amongst other networks) and it seemed the most similar network to Polycentric that I've seen (the philosophy). I did a video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mSyMCJlSwA about Nostr, but right now there is not that much to get me excited enough about Polycentric yet.

  • Problem is if social media is being used to stay in contact with friends / family then you are stuck with where they are, as they generally don't move to a new network with you. If it is for news etc, I actually prefer a good selection of RSS feeds that I follow in my RSS reader.

    I'm on lots of different social networks for blogging and although MeWe has my far biggest followings, it is centralised and non-FOSS - it's the site I've also had the most troll issues on. The Fediverse (numerous site services to choose from) has the most potential, being open and federated widely.

  • A broader context given at https://cleantechnica.com/2023/12/03/adding-context-to-that-consumer-reports-electric-car-reliability-report/

    Consumer Reports also grouped powertrains together when discussing reliability, which is where some issues start to appear. Apparently, EVs suffered 79% more problems than gas-powered vehicles. That will undoubtedly lead to shock headlines, but it’s also misleading, Autoblog says. Most EVs are new to the market, which goes back to the cliché mentioned earlier. There are also a lot fewer make/models availability, meaning that simply averaging all models together will result in a few bad apples skewing the results.

  • Syncthing warns you and asks you to choose which is newer. If you have versions set it should also keep older versions for any roll back. But I make a point to rather work in one device at a time. I actually sync all my devices to a Docker instance running Syncthing, so it works from a central point versus all devices syncing to all devices. That Docker version is on 24/7.

  • Apart from the Apple Watch (which became a door stopper when I moved back to Android) I've not had a lot of success with really good accuracy on watches. I actually opted to get a Polar H10 chest strap, and it is really super accurate. I usually live monitor the data on the Polar app on my phone (and it uploads to Strava, and then to Samsung Health), or if I'm outside I pair my Samsung Galaxy Watch to it with the Sporty Go! app so it shows on my watch.

  • To be fair to Obsidian, the default view is like three panes making it look busy, but you can toggle off both the left and right sidebar, leaving just the edit view which can be switched between edit and reading modes. Even the various toolbar icons need not be visible, and you could just use shortcuts to call them.

    I use Syncthing to sync my Obsidian notes between desktop, server, Android, iPad, and Android tablet - it happens seamlessly in the background complete with version control.

  • I'm still using Obsidian (free but not FOSS) mainly because of the wealth of plugins. QOwnNotes was another good option I used before. I really liked Logseq, but the deal-breaker for me was its approach to primarily being an outliner - and that modified all the paragraphs of my markdown notes as they become referenced blocks (otherwise it is great). I like to stick to standard markdown for portability to any future app.

  • Choosing a single letter name was a marketing disaster. Elon is truly clueless when it comes to people and social. Even worse when X implies Ex anything.

  • Reddit's big claim to fame is having results show up in Google searches. Removing it would probably hurt Reddit (and to some extent Google). I'm just hoping that enough content gets indexed by Google for Lemmy and similar sites, as the best content creators don't just reside on Reddit.

  • Marketing is where the money is, but it is a question worth asking on their project, as the folks that are actively using it are there to give a contextual answer.

  • Depends on the country as most of these resources are US I'm not sure. It's a good question though to ask on that Github project as those guys have been involved with this a long time.

  • Default Signal is better although Telegram has Secret Chat. I love thar Telegram let's you use a username to connect to others without exposing your mobile number to contacts.

    But I have way more friends who actually use Telegram than Signal. No idea why although for many the massive community groups are used by a lot communities for staying in touch, as well as safety/security groups in communities.

  • I love the idea of Wayland, but it only finally actually booted for me onto the desktop earlier this year (on Manjaro KDE). But it still randomly freezes for about a full minute, quite a bit. I am keen to move to it as my compositor hangs on X11 for some odd reason on KDE every time I try to do a rectangular area screenshot with Spectacle (mmm just realised it is also for around a minute - maybe I do have some other underlying issue), or when accessing the Compositor menu option. But X11 is still otherwise rock solid for me.

  • I'm not in any way tied to Lemmy specifically. I like the concept of voting posts up (and down), threaded comments, etc. But just like many different types of social services reside on top of the ActivityPub protocol, I would like to see something still working with ActivityPub. That was not really mentioned. But for me its about the UI and not Lemmy itself.

  • There's no mention though in the linked article that Richard actually thinks this? Both XMPP and Nostr are extensible. Nostr saw accounts linked to a server as weakness, and therefore went with many relays (any of which can be used).

    But as also mentioned, Richard is actually very active on Mastodon today. ActivityPub is not the best protocol around, but it is now a W3C standard and seems to have more popular uptake than both XMPP and Nostr (Nostr having the excuse that it is very new still).

    BTW I'm active daily on XMPP, Nostr, Mastodon, IRC, and many more, so have no particular stake in any one.

  • Technology @beehaw.org

    Microsoft 365 faces more GDPR headwinds as Germany bans it in schools: Redmond disputes report that 'it is not possible to use without transferring personal data to the USA'

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Remember BBSes (Bulletin Board Systems)? Here’s How You Can Visit One Today Using A Telnet Connection

    Technology @beehaw.org

    University of Waterloo has developed a drone-powered device that can use Wi-Fi networks to 'see' Wi-Fi devices through walls: No software patch possible

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Keyoxide is a privacy-friendly open source tool to create and verify decentralized online identities using a cryptography-based approach to bidirectional linking

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Extensity is an open source extension for Chromium browsers to quickly enable/disable extensions to save RAM and speed up the browser

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    One Utility Tool for Everything on MS Windows

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Converting Your Twitter Archive to Markdown, and t.co links to original URL

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Your Gmail Account (and other e-mail) Has Unlimited Addresses - Useful For Seeing Who Leaked Your Address to Spammers

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Cross-Platform Open-Source Fluent Reader is my current best choice for an offline RSS news aggregator

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Open source Five Filters Full Text RSS can be self-hosted in a Docker container to retrieve full text from RSS articles

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    An easy-to-make Pi-powered pocket password pal - using self-hosted Bitwarden

    Technology @beehaw.org

    RIP: Kathleen Booth, the inventor of assembly language - Builder and programmer of the ARC and SEC turned 100 this year

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Twitter's Bluesky app for a decentralized protocol for Twitter, will use the AT protocol

    Technology @beehaw.org

    In theory, eSIM makes it easier to jump between devices and phone plans, that’s far from the case right now

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Death to passwords: Beta passkey support comes to Chrome and Android - But there are still unanswered questions about lock-ins

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Btrfs Assistant is a useful GUI management tool to make managing a Btrfs filesystem easier on Linux

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Google Camera Port Hub: Get the best GCam APK for Samsung, Xiaomi, Redmi, and other phones!

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Scientists make AI laser turret for killing cockroaches - What could possibly go wrong?

    Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

    Open Book abridged version is an open source 4.2″ E-Ink screen ereader now built around a Raspberry Pi Pico