[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 40 points 1 month ago

De-googled Android ROMs:

  • GrapheneOS
  • LineageOS
  • /e/ OS
  • Volla OS

Non-android, non-apple smartphones:

  • Pinephone
  • Pinephone pro
  • Librem 5
  • Volla Phone 22
  • Jolla Phone
  • FuriPhone FLX1s

And pretty much every feature phone out there (way too many to list)

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 month ago

The good news is that Russia is only evil and fascist and so it's always bad to be associated with them. Trust me, I'm one of the good Americans

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 24 points 1 month ago

You fool, you absolute bingus. You have fallen for one of the classic blunders, for I, in my infinite wisdom, know that all states are bad. And all equally so at that. 😎

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 27 points 2 months ago

I had very few issues with a GTX 970 and i7-4790k. The only issues I hear about with either any more is the linux kernel not supporting some of the features of newer GPUs (e.g. I know ray-tracing was a pain-point at one point).

I don't like recommending distros based on such a general use case, mainly because every distro can be tweaked and configured to exactly what you want. Instead, you should research the different mainline distros that have been around for decades—Arch, Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, Guix, NixOS, OpenSuse, Slackware—and see what they're about, what sets them apart from others, what the maintainers' philosophies are, and what kind of package management system they work with. Once one sounds better than the others, look into it and try it out.

#Dos and Don'ts:

Don't try a niche distro. They are harder to troubleshoot and less likely to be actively maintained.

Don't use Ubuntu. It's just a suckier version of Debian. It used to be user-friendly Debian, but now Debian is more user-friendly than it.

Don't dual-boot with windows. This just solidifies your reliance on windows, especially if you're the type to give up on problem-solving issues that you didn't have in Windows. It also can cause issues with making Linux unbootable.

Do try a live usb with persistence before you commit entirely. It's not exactly the same as a complete install, but it's close enough to let you know how the OS feels and what hardware will or won't work with it. Some people say try a VM first, but that won't have direct hardware access.

Do problem solve the little things. Anything that irks you or bothers you or just slows down your workflow. It doesn't have to be an actual bug or glitch, just anything that could be better. This not only solidifies the feeling of ownership over your OS—you no longer have to settle for anyone else's lousy design choices—it teaches you the resources for troubleshooting larger issues.

Do plan around things not being plug and play at first. Want to test if a game runs on Linux? Great, set aside a couple of hours beforehand: first to install steam and set it up, then to figure out Proton, then to troubleshoot the game not even booting up, then to fix any glitches or whatnot, then to get your controller working. This won't always be the case, but it will irk you a lot less when it is if you expect it. The more you make time for solving these issues now, the less time they'll take up in the future (either they'll be gone, or you'll immediately know how to fix them, or your troubleshooting will be more streamlined).

Do set aside time to learn about Linux "under the hood." You don't have to become a computer scientist, but it will save you a lot of headaches, show you cool things you can do, and make your computer a smoother experience. It especially helps if you take the time to learn as they come up: e.g. installer asks you what "bootloader" you want, but you're not sure what that is, what it does, or why it's necessary? Now's the best time to take a little learning detour.

Do ask questions on forums.

Don't listen to the people who shame you for asking.

Do listen to the people who try to show you a better way of doing things, even if it's not your way.

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 70 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

>inkjet

LED printers have been around for fucking ever, and the average person doesn't need the graphic fidelity that only an overpriced pigment soup, which goes bad in a month, can supply.

Oh, and literally every part of a toner-based printer is easier to replace/repair... so why would a printer designed around repairability and upgradability use ink???

Edit' And I almost forgot: toner is cheaper per page than ink! Whyyy???????

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 50 points 2 months ago

First and foremost: about 10-20 Exabytes worth of storage space, or roughly 4 Petabytes per day.

That's 4,000,000 Gigabytes of new video per day.

And of course you'd need an efficient way of loading all that video data and streaming it to the end users, so they don't experience major interruptions, even when hundreds of thousands of people are all watching the same video at the same time. Youtube does this with caching servers/proxies, and highly optimized data delivery algorithms.

Once you have all that infrastructure, just make sure it's free and ad-free for all the watchers and uploaders. It's not like you need to pay for all those servers and storage... right?

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 22 points 2 months ago

A few answers say "they aren't private by design," but don't really go into the "why." There's the obvious "it's an electronic tracking device, duh" reason, but there's also a more nuanced reason:

Airtags are able to be picked up almost anywhere because they connect to the nearest bluetooth-enabled Apple device, and then send location info across the internet to you. Without this functionality (the ability of any and every Apple device to locate it), they wouldn't have any way to send their location back to the owner.

Your best "privacy respecting" alternatives are something that uses meshtastic (and hoping there's enough repeaters near you), something that uses cellular data and GPS (which is about as privacy-respecting as Airtags are), or just a key finder/beeper (which only works within a small radius)

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 20 points 2 months ago

The worse the product is, the more desperate they get to shove it in your face. Good products don't need to pay others to pretend it's good, you just find out via word-of-mouth or free trials

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 22 points 2 months ago

Reputable news source "GLOBAL FACTZ"

[-] GaumBeist@lemmy.ml 19 points 2 months ago

Chomsky after the leaks: "I'm an old, old man, and I'm so sickly and weary and probably on my last legs cough, cough" (looks around nervously to see if anyone's buying it)

view more: next ›

GaumBeist

joined 3 months ago