Musk? Who trusts this guy?
Staggering to think that the American space program relies heavily on this goof.
1154 publicly visible posts • joined 20 Feb 2007
This is all very charming, but am I alone in finding that Google, Facebook, and the rest consistently deliver ads for things that I don't want and have never considered?
Whether it's search results or advertising, my experience is that in recent years the web giants have really lost the plot.
I'm sitting here waiting for the day when Musk or Google or Facebook finally figure out how to kill off email and force us into some variant of Slack or YouTube.
And yes I'm serious.
One by one it feels like every on-line tool that I've ever relied on has been bought up and either ruined or shut down entirely.
It's a shame. I can recall when the Internet was a shiny new thing, full of hope and opportunity. Now it's an ad-infested mess and a constant battle to do simple tasks.
Dell laptop, Mint Linux. Tapping the middle of the trackpad = paste, especially when you've previously copied a three page document.
For me it's a nightmare, but I wouldn't even mind if there was an easy way to disable it.
I honestly can't comprehend the thought processes of many people in IT today
This is hardly the first time one of the big on-line giants has done this, which is why my files live on my local hard-drive, and backup drive. I simply don't trust Google, Apple and company to protect me.
Beyond that though is the reality that if my rural Internet or mobile service go down - a fairly common thing around here - I can still keep working on projects until it returns.
We chose HSBC as the best choice when moving between Canada and France. Over the course of 18 months we spent literally hundreds of hours on the phone, being disconnected on the phone, and hanging up the phone because the low paid Asian call center drone was incomprehensible.
They are, without question, the most technologically inept company I've dealt with.
I now bank with the decidedly tiny Lahave River Credit Union, where I can even phone the branch directly and talk to a real person.
Just dumped out of Twitter and moved to Bluesky.
It's a good fit, and growing past a million users.
One user explained it nicely:
Bluesky has no algorithm. Who you follow and what they post is your feed.
Don't argue with chuds or quote-reskeet dunk on them, just block (and maybe report)
Starve the assholes out and don't give them the attention they crave
I remember when everyone was going to wear glasses to watch 3D TV...
I remember when everyone was going to wear Google Glass...
I remember at least a few other companies flogging some kind of 3D VR goggles...
And most recently I remember when Facebook was going to change the world with Meta goggles...
Then Apple..
But surely THIS time!
Here in rural Nova Scotia we've been trying for nearly a year to correct the name of our road from "Breakwater", which it's not, to "Lighthouse" which is what the sign reads.
We have failed, so every delivery includes special instructions for drivers, and new ones invariably phone us in confusion.
We did though convince Google to change the address for the 150+ year old lighthouse at the end of our road. We know the request worked because we received a notification that the "Western Head lighthouse has moved to a new location!"
I've heard this claim before:
as its software "powers nearly half the web"
Has anyone ever documented, or challenged, this claim? I find it pretty dubious.
I have one site still using Wordpress, mostly because it's super low maintenance so I only get annoyed by WP every couple of months.
Businesses will stumble around, either relying solely on outdated email, or switching to consumer-grade messaging services in an attempt to keep communication flowing.
I'm sorry, is this guy denigrating E-MAIL at a time when Slack is crashing itself? Is he suggesting that we shouldn't default to a system which seems to be 99.99% reliable and instead should twiddle our thumbs waiting for the latest Slack outage to get fixed?
I say nonsense to that! For me it'll be Threads... or maybe a fax.
It's a well known fact that the "Bastions of Freedom(tm)" all use the imperial units. USA, Burma and Liberia.
Yo Buddy! And Canada! Sometimes, not all the time, but especially in construction, lumber yards, and baking.
Shoe and clothing sizes just pick a random number
ChromeOS is a desktop Linux with the Linuxiness stripped out. No choice about partitioning. No weird dual-boot mechanisms. No choice of desktops or package managers. No package manager!
Mint: I buy a new laptop. Spend 15 minutes installing Mint, all defaults, disable Caps-Lock, I'm done.
Been doing this for ten or twelve years with no issues, no real change. It just works.
My wife's Apple on the other hand constatly does inexplicable things. On the odd occasion when I am forced to boot into Windows (yes Adobe, I'm talking to you.) it's dear god, what a mess.
All of which is to say, why do Linux writers take such pride in the Grey-beard scenario? It benefits no-one, and surely does not benefit Linux.
The downvotes on this post reflect the way that Americans have well and truly drunk the Kool-Aid, or have been taught from birth to believe their country's own PR.
This is the country that has a list of seven words that you can't say on radio, that extends copyright protection more or less indefinitely so that Mickey Mouse doesn't go Public Domain, and which accepts both horrendous rates of gun violence, and a truly abominable health care system for large swaths of the population, despite being what is classed as a developed nation.
And yet it trumpets its supposed superiority and freedom at every turn, ignoring a political system that that borders on insane, (seriously? Trump??) a military that is seriously many, many, many times what's needed, and a universe of social media that gets worse by the day.
I believe that America is on its last legs. There will be loud and violent outbursts, but the whole thing is crumbling before our eyes. Whether it's government, or corporations, Twitter or Facebook, I can see that it's all heading for a collapse.
I just hope that Usenet survives, and we can go back to the Good Old Days.
Simply select some text in any program, switch to a different window, point where you want it to go and middle click.
Mint, Dell laptop. I am forever inadvertently inserting blocks of copied text where I don't want them by accidentally tapping the wrong part of the trackpad.
More critically, there is apparently no way to disable the function.
the web stack has become a ubiquitous standard for creating cross-platform user interfaces. You create it once and you have an app in the browser, mobile, and desktop. … It's here to stay and that's not a bad thing."
Unlike the guys in Redmond and SoCal, we live in the poorer part of a Canadian province where the norm is to have power and/or internet outages for hours or even days. And where mobile companies charge an arm and a leg for any decent data allowance.
That's why my email archive lives on my computer, available no matter what. It's also less prone to being encrypted and held for ransom by hackers.
Just this week someone was expressing frustration at news writers who regurgitate Cop-speak.
The example used was "attended a motor vehicle accident" as opposed to "went to."
Also notable was the reporting of pedestrians being run over, referring to them being hit by "a vehicle" with no mention of the driver holding the steering wheel.
On arriving in Nova Scotia we discovered a place where newspapers really didn't exist, many trades and businesses see no need to have a website, and where Google can't be convinced to get the name of our road right.
For us the choices for anything are: ask a neighbour, Facebook, or Reddit. There are literally no other options, and r/NovaScotia and r/Halifax saved us more than a few times.
Now both subreddits are locked up tight, and the only online option left are the bizarre Facebook buy and sell groups.
I was never a Reddit user before, but they've been invaluable in this place.
More and more I'm turning away from the Internet. The greed, the avarice, and the sheer stupidity of the people running sites like Reddit or Facebook have made it next to useless, and often frustrating to the extreme.
I can remember the early glory days of the Internet. Now I feel like I'm biding my time waiting for the whole damned thing to just collapse into a pile a steaming dying electronic trash.
Things like Facebook or Twitter, that used to be fun, and popular, now seem lost, with algorithms that just seem to get worse and worse, and rules and restrictions that sometimes defy all logic.
Tools that only a few years ago were useful, and even essential keep getting "updated" and "improved" to the point where the basic functions are almost impossible to use, with idiotic features and advertising overtaking everything.
Greed rules all, whether greed for money, or greed for power - or, lately, greed for assholery.
What so much of the Internet doesn't understand is this: people do have a limits, and one day they'll just say "to hell with it"
I remember when everyone was going to wear glasses to watch 3D TV...
I remember when everyone was going to wear Google Glass...
I remember at least a few other companies flogging some kind of 3D VR goggles...
And most recently I remember when Facebook was going to change the world with Meta goggles...
But surely THIS time!
I'll admit to sticking with Chrome just because it's easy and ubiquitous. This though looks like enough to get me looking at alternatives again.
Suggestions welcome.
Beyond that it feels as if there isn't a week goes by when I don't abandon some task because some previously adequate web site becomes inaccessible due to some arcane 2FA invention, or just because they've made some simple task stupidly complex.
The Internet us horribly broken, and I can't see a likely fix appearing.
Indeed. Over the course of 2022, while living in France, we enjoyed mobile service (Free Mobile if you must know) that cost us about 20 Euros a month and ran all of our calling, email, data, and even a full-on Zoom based teaching business. We had literally no need for anything else. Now back in Canada we're paying 4 to 5 times as much, and getting significantly less service - especially the paltry data allowance, which means we also pay for home Internet service.
I honestly didn't notice any great jump between 4G and 5G, and seriously doubt that 6G, 7G, or Oh-My-God-We're-Out-Of-Numbers-G service will make any real difference to our lives. A significant price cut would though.
And that, I think, is how I view every new tech development in the last decade - 3D-TV, AI, the Cloud, Slack, anything Google launches - whatever the newest flavour of the month might be. I look at it and ask: is this really a significant improvement on what came before, or just more marketing speak and a leap towards forcing me to dump my existing hardware for something new?
It's not that I don't love and appreciate tech, just that I'm weary of "breakthroughs" that are really just minor upgrades to what already exists.
German things are great because of their culture: a dispassionate passion for technology. I doubt that China has the right culture, besides, their authoritarian regime tends to minimize innovation.
Nonsense. Any time spent in China quickly teaches you that as a population they not only love tech, they take it in directions that the West has barely considered.
Ignoring my Mint Linux box, we are a household that strenuously avoids allowing updates to install themselves. Like most heavy users of computing equipment we've been hammered more than once by updates that break things.
The latest is our maybe four year old Brother MFC-L3750 laser printer. After ignoring the "Firmware update" prompt for months I finally gave in and clicked "install." I mean, it's a printer, what could possibly go wrong?
We now have printer, WIFI connected, that can only be printed on if your laptop or other device is literally in the same room as the Brother. If you're anywhere else in the house, despite a good strong WIFI network connection, it does nothing.
Or, more accurately, usually does nothing. Once every three days it will suddenly work fine for a couple of hours. Linux, Apple, Android.... same pattern.
This is a machine that worked stunningly well for years. Plugged it in, popped in the toner, and ignored it for months. Now it's bordering on useless, and I'm faced with probably hours on the phone with Brother to find out how to back out of the update.
The point of all of this is obvious: if you expect people to apply updates to remain secure, you need to properly test them to make sure they don't ruin the user experience or disable your product. Yes that will cost you money, but it's part of doing bjusiness.
When Google shut down Reader it became obvious that the way forward was to lean heavily towards software and on-line resources that were't controlled by big, greedy corporations like Facebook and Google. Linux instead of Windows. LibreOffice instead of Office. And hosting my own web sites and email instead of Gmail and Wordpress.com.
Over the last decade it has become abundantly obvious that none of these mega-corporations give a sweet god-damn about the end users. They just want to monetize everything and everyone to the maximum amount possible. That's why using their products has turned into a massive steeplechase race with multi-factor identification, massive amounts of data collection, and with "upgrades" that remove much-loved features to the benefit of the people making the profits off of you.
The Internet in its early days was a simpler, easier, faster thing. Heck, I can even remember the long-lost days when a search on Google actually turned up what you needed, not dozens of advertisements, and spam pages of no value. Yes, in the early days the Internet wasn't endlessly annoying, cluttered, and often dishonest.
Despite being an early adopter, and despite having worked "under the hood" to understand how it goes together, I'm finding that more and more I move away from the Internet to tools that don't waste my time, don't demand multiple passwords, and don't insult my intelligence.
My paper datebook is better than Google calendar. My printed books are better than the Kindle. My bank answers phone calls instead of directing me to a phone bank in Malaysia. And shopping at the local hardware store is better, and easier than spending an hour on Amazon trying to find what I need.
Really the history of the Internet will be one of one great idea after another that eventually become crap when the people who started it managed to bury users with crap and un-needed features, and turned a lovely tool into an annoyance. Whether it's Google, or Facebook, or Twitter, or Slack, the pattern is always the same. Until these corporations learn that sometimes the best next step is to sit on your hands and just let the thing function we'll just be heading for the next big disaster.
A good UI would confine inbox use to unread message Opening a message would remove it from the inbox. There should be another folder for current mail threads. After a period of inactivity; no further messages on the thread during the period would result in its being archived although there might be some sort of staging folder for recent but non-current threads. And the deleted folder is nothing more than a guard against those oops! moments, it will be cleared according to some sort of schedule.
Again, while this may look really cool and sensible to you, for a large portion of the email using community it would be a complete and utter disaster. Email messages should NEVER just disappear from someone's Inbox. Some users literally cannot handle such tings - they're the ones that find Gmail so useless and frustrating.
I make heavy use of folders, subfolders, and filters in TB, but they're under my control, not someone else's brilliant idea of what would be perfect for me.
Let's start be recognising that for the user the principle object of communication is the thread**, not the individual messages that comprise it; a singleton message is just a member of a thread which has, currently, no additional members.
No, lets start by acknowledging that some users absolutely despise the threadifcation of the universe, and find them annoying and counter-productive. I will happily argue that the principal object of an email system are the single discrete messages. I dread trying to dig a specific message out of the mess of some overly long thread.
Hell, I've even been known to change subject lines just to break an overly long thread.
Much of this nonsense seems to have come from the young people who have only known the universe of Gmail. The fact that different email applications handle and display threads differently just makes it worse.
I'm the first to admit that Thunderbird really is lacking in many ways - it just feels very old, and not in a good way.
Still, I fear what new fresh hell will be delivered to us with the big update. You can count me among those who like Linux (at least Mint Linux) specifically because of the ways that it doesn't change from month to month or year to year. That's also why I stick with LibreOffice and happily avoid MS Word.
I will applaud any code warrior whose credo begins with the immortal words "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."