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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TI
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2 yr. ago

  • My biggest worry about Mozilla is that most of their revenue comes from Google. What's stopping Google from demanding that Mozilla does certain things to Firefox, like forcing them to reduce the ad blocking capabilities, just like Chrome?

  • One of the core values of conservatism is removing regulations and protections for regular people against corporations, and giving them more power. That's what Elon believes in. The rest of it, like the "family values" and "religious rights" are just a smoke screen for the voters.

  • Antivirus software for Linux also has kernel access. You can't intercept OS operations like opening files or launching executables without kernel access. And some of the companies I worked at also required antivirus software on Linux servers.

    You can absolutely run Windows without an anti-virus, it has plenty of security features built-in.

    It's all a matter of trust. Do you trust your engineers to properly configure machines to be secure and not run exes from dubious sources, or do you trust a cybersecurity company to do it for you? Anti-virus software nowadays is more about restricting users from doing stupid shit.

  • It's not Microsoft's fault a third party company wrote a kernel module that crashes the OS.

    Unlike the mobile world where apps are severely limited and sandboxed, the desktop is completely the opposite. Microsoft has tried many times to limit what programs can do, but encountered a lot of resistance and ultimately had to let it go.

  • Crowdstrike is not a monopoly. The problem here was having a single point of failure, using a piece of software that can access the kernel and autoupdate running on every machine in the organization.

    At the very least, you should stagger updates. Any change done to a business critical server should be validated first. Automatic updates are a bad idea.

    Obviously, crowdstrike messed up, but so did IT departments in every organization that allowed this to happen.

  • It could have been worse. The romans had the day divided into 24 hours, like we do, but the hours varied in length so that from sunrise to sunset, you would always have 12 hours.

    Imagine if that was the agreed upon time system, and we had to program that into computers.

  • I've read a lot of reviews before buying, and that was my expectation as well. I had a Nexus 5 before and it was a great phone.

    Maybe I got a lemon that had some hardware fault, I don't know. I've been wanting to get a newer Pixel just for GrapheneOS, but that experience was so bad, I'm having a lot of doubts

  • Pixel 3A. Constant bugs, camera would stop working or had a long delay starting up, system would randomly stop responding, constant crashes, lock screen would bug out preventing you from unlocking the phone. Dialer would bug out preventing you from answering the phone. Random reboots. Screen scratched really easily.

    Phone crapped out about a month before warranty expired, wouldn't boot any more. Luckily, it was still in warranty and they returned the full price.

    The worst most unreliable phone I ever owned.