grue

@grue@lemmy.world

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grue,

Telecom is a natural monopoly: even if you’ve got 6-7 companies marketing to the public, chances are only one of them is actually running the lines (maybe two, if we’re talking about both fiber and coaxial) and the others are just resellers. In other words, the competition is kinda artificial since the one with the infrastructure should (in theory – barring regulations disallowing it) always be able to undercut the others, who are just middlemen taking out an extra chunk of profit.

Although I guess you could argue that deregulation is better than the regulatory-captured status quo, fully regulating the telecom provider as the monopoly it is (if not nationalizing it entirely) would be inherently more efficient.

grue, (edited )

Reminder: corporate claims of “licensed, not sold” are LIES. If you buy something, you own it regardless of what they say. Stop taking legal advice from the enemy!

grue, (edited )

I also use AnySoftKeyboard (installed from F-Droid, BTW) but IMO it kinda sucks. In particular, it often tries to autocorrect things to capitalized proper nouns, which is almost always exactly the wrong thing to do.

Frankly, I’m reading this thread in hopes of finding something else to replace it.

grue,

People are capable of making their own choice in privacy and tech.

Frankly, they often really fucking aren’t, which is why consumer protection laws are supposed to exist.

Nobody is forcing any of this in homes.

Note the weasel-words “in homes.” That’s because they are forcing it literally everywhere else.

grue,

You could say the Internet and this meme will be together forever.

How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

I’ve been seeing all these posts about Linux lately, and looking at them, I can honestly see the appeal. I’d love having so much autonomy over the OS I use, and customize it however I like, even having so many options to choose from when it comes to distros. The only thing holding me back, however, is incompatibility issues....

grue,

Any company that doesn’t support Linux doesn’t deserve my patronage.

grue,

I hate rebooting to play games (or even just closing my other software, for that matter), so I choose to reject games I’d have to reboot for.

grue,

I don’t even have a single computer in my house with Windows on it anymore, and haven’t for years. Even the disused Windows 7 install I had sitting on an SSD gathering dust in a drawer has now been relegated to a disk image file.

grue,

Deciding how much wage theft to do is not valid “company policy.” The law is not arbitrary.

grue,

Switch to Linux at home now. In six months, you’ll have a much better idea if you want to use it at work.

grue, (edited )

I’m getting fed up with the bullshit

Frankly, that’s the reason – the original reason, and the most important – to use Free Software. With very few exceptions, the origin story of every Free Software project was somebody getting fed up with a piece of proprietary software either abusing them or just not doing what they wanted it to do. In fact, the entire Free Software movement itself was invented in the first place because Richard Stallman got fed up with Xerox’s bullshit back in the day!

So yeah, there you go: that’s the only reason you need, and you already knew it.

grue,
grue, (edited )

I always have felt like blaming cars, of all things, misses the bigger picture.

On the contrary, doing anything other than blaming cars misses the bigger picture that car-dependent development is what drives, directly or indirectly, almost all the pollution except for industry and agriculture:

  1. The emissions of the cars themselves, of course.
  2. The emissions associated with producing all the extra concrete you need to build places to store the cars, as well as wider roads to fit all the traffic. (EDIT: and longer roads, for that matter, because inserting all the space for car storage forces your destinations to be further apart!)
  3. The emissions associated with restrictive low-density zoning codes forcing 90% of the population to live in single-family homes exposed to the environment on all six sides, instead of giving them the freedom to choose to live in denser housing where shared walls increase thermal efficiency.
grue,
grue,

Why are you trying to rebut an argument I didn’t make?

grue,

I’ve been meaning to learn Fortran in part because because of the whole “big bucks for being willing to maintain old software” thing, but mostly because I’d like to work on the sorts of scientific computing software that was (and still often is) written in Fortran.

grue, (edited )

There is not a single commenter (nor downvoter) in this thread who would open the source for that microscope if they owned that microscope company.

Fuck you; you are not entitled to speak for me. Take your condescending trolling elsewhere.

grue,

I suppose your only issue here is that the software vendor or some entity should support it forever.

If no entity wants to take on support, they should be forced to release the source code to the Public Domain. Copyright is a social contract, not an entitlement – if you don’t hold up your end of the bargain of keeping it available, you deserve to lose it.

grue,

At the very least, being able to read the source code gives you a Hell of a head start on writing a new driver for an appropriate OS (and by that I mean Linux, obviously). Saves a whole reverse-engineering step.

Also, the “a card that only plugs into 30 year old desktops” thing isn’t quite as insurmountable as you think.

I’m not saying creating an entire project to adapt the controller and software stack to modern systems would be cheap or easy, but it’s possible – and more to the point, seemingly less expensive than buying the new microscope for “hundreds of thousands of €” (especially in the long run, since the company is likely to pull the same shit over and over again), even if you’ve got to pay a gaggle of comp-e grad students to put it together for you.

grue,

The development’s buildings… are clustered together intimately to create inviting courtyards for social gatherings and paved – not asphalt – “paseos”, a word used in Spanish-speaking parts of the US south-west to denote plazas or walkways for strolling.

Importantly, such an arrangement provides relieving shade from the scorching sun – temperatures in these walkways have been measured at 90F (32C) on days when the pavement outside Culdesac is 120F (48C)

TL;DR: shade is a thing.

grue,

I think you meant “Thank you, Mr. Data.”

And you’re welcome!

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