[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I want to like pass keys, but the current gate keeping by google, apple, and Microsoft keeps me from using them. Hopefully support grows outside of browser extension bs as I refuse to use chrome, edge, and so on.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'd rather sell off mementos than lose livelihood. We all know the top 1% shelter and live off non income based tax shelters, and then just pass those shelters on through legacies. Given the arbitrary caps on assets your grandmother's Polaroids would likely be safe. You wont see good faith attempts to fix taxes regardless though, as politicians are in the business of making money, so would never go after their own livelihood.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is an area I have said needs to be taxed to hell, there is no good reason we should allow the passing of wealth without heavy penalty. I'm convinced that if we taxed all forms of wealth transfer at something like 80%, we could pretty much get rid of income tax. Income you have earned should be your entitlement, assets passed down to you should be where the taxes cut in.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago

Can confirm, I have mangled UIs in almost every CSS framework, its a talent of mine apparently แ••( แ› )แ•—

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

I don't entirely agree that more and better documentation removes bugs, problems, questions, concerns, or cuts too much into a 50% drop in site usage. Having documentation is just another tool in the toolbelt, to be used alongside community forums.

Discovery process for myself and many of my coworkers has always been; Look up obscure errors, problems, etc. to get an idea of what I'm dealing with, and then off to the documentation.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 139 points 1 year ago

Rather than cultivate a friendly and open community, they decided to be hostile and closed. I am not surprised by this at all, but I am surprised with how long the decline has taken. I have a number of bad/silly experiences on stackoverflow that have never been replicated on any other platform.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Your two examples of the causes, "back taxes" and "grandma has two wills" would be solved still in the case of Blockchain. I'm no die hard fan of crypto currency. However if taxes were verifiable on chain, wills were verifiable and unique globally, then there would be no second will.

Say what you will about Blockchain being one big slow database, it is still one big slow database of huge magnitude, that enforces global uniqueness. Again I'm not entirely sold on the premise but look at how our taxes are done, social security numbers, identities. All these problems stem from a lack of a decentralized authority. If some random credit agency says bill down the street is me, we have no concrete and secure means of verifying uniqueness.

Personally, i have been saying for years that identity should be tied to asymmetric encryption. Definitely do not need Blockchain exclusively to solve these problems, but it's better than what we have now.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I know people drive sales of digital media because of convince, hell I have bought a few movies digitally myself for this reason. However with the videogame industry you are truly right. You are dropping 60/70 bucks so that Microsoft, Bethesda, or whoever, can just yank these games from their platform for no reason. You are then left with nothing, maybe a backwards compatibility release on the next platform, but guess what, your buying that shit again.

It is truly baffling the lack of foresight, with clear examples of this issue such as Nintendo's shops closing, and psn manipulating of backwards compatibility hardware over the years of PS3.

Saddens me greatly.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I work primarily on Ubuntu, last I tried .xslx and .docx (of course 99.9% of the company is office with office 365) it was a buggy mess of macros and various features not working/porting over. Which is exactly what the article articulated, embrace, expand, destroy.

[-] DataDecay@beehaw.org 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I remember Microsoft's dismantling (knee capping) of libre office, and enjoyed the read on XXMP. How quickly people forget the past or think they are different to withstand monopolies cutthroat strategies.

DataDecay

joined 1 year ago