squaresinger

@squaresinger@feddit.de

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squaresinger,

Old laptops can often be a pain if they don’t have mainstream hardware.

I have a laptop with a touchpad made by Elan. I couldn’t even find a website for them, but the laptop’s support page has a Windows driver that works well.

I put Linux on there maybe 5 years ago, and there just is no driver for this touchpad on Linux, so it works in PS2 mouse modus and nothing else. No multitouch, no gestures, no way to change any slightly more advanced settings like sensitivity.

squaresinger,

I vividly remember that time when I tried to get Linux running on my old laptop in the mid-2000s. There was no wifi driver for that card in the repo, but the manufacturer provided a driver to download. But it was in C++ source code that failed to compile because it was so outdated.

So there I was as a teenager who barely knew a little C at that time, porting the driver from outdated C++ to the then-modern version. It wasn’t easy but I managed to.

I am so happy it’s not 2005 anymore, when it comes to Linux.

squaresinger,

They actually discontinued quite a few architectures (in total 15 architectures). But all of them where cancelled, because nobody in their right mind is still running them if not for a youtube video.

Sparc Sun-4, SPARCstation and SPARCserver are probably the best-known ones after 386.

squaresinger,

I guess, they, for some reason, do want people to run Windows on that machine^^

Or they are triggered so hard, that they couldn’t even understand the /s anymore when they got to that point of the sentence.

squaresinger,

I thought the /s should have been enough to tell everyone that this was a joke, but apparently not.

squaresinger,

XFCE is really bad with this. KDE is much better, but still when setting up something a bit more complicated, you are quickly back to reading man pages. And man pages really aren’t great.

squaresinger, (edited )

Finally designers are realizing it’s not 2013 anymore and nobody liked the Win8 designed-in-powerpoint style.

squaresinger,

I mentioned this in the comment you answered to. But as I said, this might be an issue for people that use Linux because they really hate anything that isn’t GPL, but 97% of the people on this planet care more about whether something is simple to use than what license it uses, as evidenced by the market share of Windows, Android, Chromebooks and Apple products.

Wouldn’t it be better to get some of them to use Ubuntu with snaps than to stay on their proprietary platforms, because packet management sucks and conflicts are basically impossible to solve for someone who’s not a software developer?

squaresinger,

I really don’t like that sentiment though. Software development isn’t for free just because you slap GPL on it. These devs need to be paid somehow if they are supposed to do more than 3h/week.

You can also see the same thing in the Linux kernel. Many Kernel devs are employed by Microsoft, Google, the NSA and many other commercial entities.

squaresinger,

What’s that?

squaresinger,

Beru on the left is 16 (age of the actress, not of the character), Beru on the right is 57.

squaresinger,

Yeah, true. Grandpa Guinness on the right is just 63 in that picture.

Lets see how we look like in our 60’s with all the microplastics inside us ;)

But it shouldn’t be worse than smoking, lead, smog and missing sunscreen

squaresinger,

The poster before has a point. The translation in the video is pretty damning, but there is no real way to know if the translation is truthful if all you have is that video and not the ability to understand the original.

squaresinger,

I found a few sources:

-Times of Israel: timesofisrael.com/…/netanyahu-goal-of-war-is-to-d…-Wall Street Journal: wsj.com/…/amalek-and-jihad-israel-ground-invasion…-Times of India: m.timesofindia.com/world/…/104802548.cms-TAZ: taz.de/…/-NBC: nbcnews.com/…/israel-hamas-war-gaza-attacks-hamas…-MSN: www.msn.com/en-in/news/world/…/ar-AA1j2pvC

Google has a huge amount of hits on this topic. Seems pretty certain that he used a Nazi reference.

squaresinger,

OP, do you know where the books of Moses in the old testament come from?

Exactly, it’s a copy of the Jewish Torah which Netanyahu quoted.

squaresinger,

Sure the designers of this monstrosity thought, “There are only black people living there, so it’s a win-win” -.-

squaresinger,

Putting a dog on a leash and muzzle it is how I’d treat a mennace. So I think we are mostly in agreement ;)

squaresinger,

I was attacked multiple times by dogs and I don’t care what race they are. All dogs in public should be on a leash and muzzled.

And every time I was attacked I was just walking down the road and some random dog without leash or muzzle just attacked and bit me. And every time the owner was like “The dog has never done anything like that”. That totally makes everything better. I always felt so honored that I was the first one that dog hurt. I still got scars on my shoulder from that one time and that was almost 20 years ago.

I don’t think breed-based laws are a good idea, because they make it look like every other breed is not dangerous.

I think, all dogs should be leashed and muzzled in public and all owners should have to get a license that includes a test and yearly inspections first.

squaresinger,

Come to think about that: to operate a car, motorcycle, boat or aeroplane you need to get a license, proving that you know what you are doing. Depending on vehicle and jurisdiction, you might even need to re-take tests frequently. All of these vehicles (in most jurisdictions) require frequent inspections and if they fail these inspections, you are no longer allowed to operate them.

Also, there are very stringent laws on how you are allowed to operate these vehicles, with really harsh fines for violations of these laws.

Looks like your stance on dog ownership is much more hardcore than mine, but I could get behind that.

squaresinger,

Total agreement.

squaresinger,

Another issue that should be taken care of. But have you tried getting an aircraft license?

squaresinger,

The issue is that for every good dog owner who trains their dog, puts it on a leash in public, picks up the dog shit and makes sure their dog can’t cause trouble, there is also some idiot who got a dog on a whim, mistreats it and doesn’t train it at all.

And most often the people who don’t care for training their dog are also the people who don’t care to secure the dog in public places.

I know that’s a generalisation and there probably are some counter examples. But a “don’t care” attitude generally runs through everything a person does.

And having a dog is a multiplier of what trouble that “don’t care” attitude can cause.

That’s why I am for licensing/inspections. For someone who does care it probably won’t change much. They already go to a training course with their dog. Just give them a license for completing the training/make that training mandatory if you don’t want to call it a license.

Any reasonable dog owner will be at vet in regular intervals anyway. Just let the vet not only check whether the dog is physically fit, but also if it obeys it’s owner and if it shows signs of abuse. And make that checkup mandatory. It’s better for the dogs anyway if they get their health checked regularly.

I see why you think it’s not necessary, because you might be the kind of dog owner who cares and then it’s just additional hassle. But, as I said, there are many who don’t care, even if in your bubble (and I don’t mean this word negatively) everyone cares for their dogs.

squaresinger,

Social services don’t pay for your dog’s vet. Why should it pay for other dog expenses?

Regarding gun control, I luckily live in a country with decent gun control laws. So our death rate due to gun violence in peace time doesn’t resemble the civilian casulty rate in some war zones.

squaresinger,

You can have a department for something like that. But it doesn’t have to be funded by the tax payer. That’s what license fees are there for. Works great for cars already (at least where I am from).

But seriosly, “but regulation costs money” is a pretty weak argument, because everything costs money.

squaresinger,

That makes sense what you are saying. The real question is how the majority of the population sees the issue.

Take for example smoking bans in restaurants and public buildings. In my county this was something the politicians didn’t want to do for a very long time because they feared the backlash of the smokers. But after a very successful public petition for enacting a smoking ban they did some surveys and found out that almost 70% of the population was for such a ban.

They then enacted the ban and all the smokers where like “The restaurants are all going to die”. Then the ban came and it was just business as usual. Nothing bad happened and actually, revenue increased because more non-smokers came to the restaurants.

I don’t have statistics on how many people would want stronger regulation of dogs, and that value might vary a lot between places. Depending on the circumstances (e.g. if it happens after a particularly gruesome dog attack) stuff like that might not even need too much political capital.

For example, after a pitbull killed a toddler who was just walking down the road, the city where I live enacted compulsory leashes in all public places. There was no shitstorm against it.

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