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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Sure, I'm a sociology student, not a developer. We compare everything to anything – Jesus to Hitler among other examples.

  • I'm not going to watch the entire video, but Magit actually makes it easy to collaborate on text, even in humanities. No sane Emacs user would use FTP with someone not working in tech and this actually feels like what someone who doesn't work in tech but wants to flex upon non-tech workers would do. And putting a fake fireplace or I don't know, a silly hollywood program is contrary to the Emacs culture, this is rather what you would see among e.g. suckless communities.

  • It's free software, funded by donations. Anyway, no, not where I live, and I'm autistic, you're comparing the way I communicate with an ad.

  • Oh, definitely not a purchase, but Emacs. My life was a mess because of Twitter and it was anti-Twitter in every way – no characters limit, offline, insanely powerful. While Twitter would prevent me from prioritizing, Org-mode could handle task lists, spreadsheets, text documents, with academic citations support, and could export them to .ics, .odt, .pdf, .md, etc. Ideas are affordances and Emacs has let me focus on these instead of trying to build a picture perfect online profile.

    Whereas Twitter isn't meant for most people's use cases so it runs a long-term scam called “optimization for engagement” (which is actually abuse by definition), doing everything it can to prevent its victims from taking hindsight on and conceptualizing what's happening to them, Emacs is letting me channel all of this frustration into reading and writing my master thesis. Which deals with how social media increase social inequalities. Highly recommended.

  • Do you realize that calling it “Koscher” implies that any billionaire would secretly be a Jew? It's antisemitic propaganda.

    Anyway, I don't think you got me. I implied that I was plugging peripherals on my Raspberry Pi, working on my university campus with better ergonomics than on a laptop.

  • A Raspberry Pi. I bought it out of a whim and now I use it as a portable desktop computer, I can use Alpine Linux with my files and my setup on virtually any system that doesn't whitelist MAC addresses.

    Especially handy when your university has contracts with Microsoft so you aren't supposed to use competitive software, I feel like I'm breaking the law.

  • Yes, and this will foster large instances, similarly to the Mastodon project, which means a concentration of power, which means easy targets for billionaires.

    This is similar to presidential regimes: they can be useful temporarily in a “move fast, break things” motto (see France trying to be perceived as a “winner” of the Second World war after having constitutionally given the full powers to the Pétain Marshall, who then decided to collaborate with Nazis) but they're much easier to corrupt and they make it much easier to say, privatize every public service than a parliamentary one.

    You don't want power concentration or the billionaires will come for you.