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455
Joined
4 yr. ago

  • I'd advise you to jump right in. Create an account on osm.org and then click the "edit" button. There's quick demo that runs you through the basics and any time you're making changes you can tag them with "needs review" so that others can check your changes.

    The documentation is pretty great and I've found it really easy to update/add new info around my area as-needed, which helps not just yourself but everyone else around you.

    The data eventually makes it to https://www.qwant.com/maps, because they also use open street map data, which is a really nice UI to use on the desktop.

  • In general, the majority of apps should work on a de-googled phone (lineage, graphene, calyx, etc). That said, there are a few apps that require a feature called SafetyNet to ensure the system hasn't been modified. Apps with this feature will not work and are generally limited to banking/financial type apps.

  • kinda agree with you.

    Firefox is not doing well, and greedy CEO's are not helping the cause. I wish they'd take a playbook from Nintendo's leadership, show they really back the product, and take a pay cut to help the cause.

    I can't imaging the CEO being significantly impacted if they had to go from $6,700,000 per year to $3,350,000 and could single-handedly save at least 10 engineers at $300,000+ each to continue to work on core features and guarantee long-term success.


    Nintendo's Satoru Iwata on layoffs:

    If we reduce the number of employees for better short-term financial results, employee morale will decrease, and I sincerely doubt employees who fear that they may be laid off will be able to develop software titles that could impress people around the world

  • out of the loop since I've moved to debian and been using flatpak for the last few years, what software are you installing via PPA that isn't generally available via flatpak?

  • The flatpak version updates in the background, doesn't interrupt if its already running, and is immediately on the latest version the next time you run firefox.

  • Jack doesn't own bluesky but he is on the board [0] and even working for a public benefit company, is supposed to [1]:

    ... operate the business with the same authority and behavior as in a traditional corporation

    It does go on to state they're required to consider the impact of their decisions not only for shareholders but also employees, customers, community, etc, but there's no mechanism that forces them to do "the right thing". A public benefit company is basically a way to protect decisions made if they were to not align with the concept of "shareholder primacy" [2]. On the other hand, if Bluesky had registered as a certified B Corp [3], that would have more weight to it as they not only have to state their intentions but also provide evidence.

    In regards to being federated - are they actually federating with anyone yet? Genuine question, I haven't kept up.

    In regards to being open source, it's a good start, but like the Chromium project, the company's needs will drive it forward and the interest of the company will come first, good or bad.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluesky_(social_network)

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benefit_corporation

    [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareholder_primacy

    [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_Corporation_(certification)

  • Going from one billionaire's platform to another (Twitter/Musk > Bluesky/Dorsey) is not a smart move. There's a vast segment of the population that learns nothing and keeps making the same mistakes.

  • what Ubuntu and Firefox are up to together is kinda what Microsoft went to court over Internet Explorer for in the 90s.

    Can you elaborate on the statement? I'm not connecting the dots.

  • It’s disingenuous to act like this is some huge burden.

    Having to double your software engineers, UI/UX designers, QA engineers, DevOps, and localization/accessibility specialists to handle a second browser is a HUGE burden for a non-profit.

    If you don't care about quality, security, or user experience, sure you can just pass a "does it compile" test and push to prod. You'll quickly find that nobody wants to use this under resourced browser.

    Or if it’s such a pain, you don’t bother and just ship the WebKit version everywhere.

    This is exactly what Apple wants. They don't want to give people a real choice because they're scared of real competition.

  • probably cheaper to pay for the data directly than to have to invest in engineers + infra + storage + people with the skills required to attempt to break/circumvent any layers of security.

  • Significantly overblown. Most of the opened github issues were by the same person. Seems someone doesn't like it and is trying to spam the issue and frame it as a bigger deal than it really is.