This is called a "15-minute city".
Short answer: inserting affiliate links into results, and weird cryptocurrency stuff. https://www.theverge.com/2020/6/8/21283769/brave-browser-affiliate-links-crypto-privacy-ceo-apology
I don't know if that's "worse than Microsoft" because that's a real high bar. But it's different anyway.
Correct. This is also why Apple switched to zsh as the default shell over bash. They still ship Bash 3.2 in macOS, because from 4.0 on, Bash started using GPLv3 instead of GPLv2.
I'm not against the idea of creating proprietary software out of open-source software, if the license allows that. However, I am always against this practice of "closing the door behind you".
Bell Riots are coming this year. The Second American Civil War starts in 2026, which leads directly into WWIII.
From there, everything is pretty much terrible until warp drive is invented.
Sadly, there's no official LineageOS for the OnePlus 10 or 11 series. I remember back with the 7 series it was officially supported on launch, and OnePlus sent units to open source developers. I don't think OnePlus cares that much about the development community anymore.
Can't be arsed.
It means you don't care to put in the effort required.
Carbon wasn't that prevalent 10 years ago. 15, maybe. 20, definitely.
10 years ago, Carbon was already officially deprecated, and it had clearly been a second-class citizen for years before that. Most apps were already using Cocoa at that point.
The github page has more context than the F-Droid listing.
API Key
This application uses the AudD® service as a Music Recognition API. You need a special API token provided by AudD® to use the application. If you don't have one, you can sign up for a free API token. You can add the key on the onboarding or preferences screen, or just set it in local.properties.
There is also the option to use the app without a token, but please note that this will restrict the number of daily recognitions that can be performed.
The AudD web site says:
Music recognition API for both content analysis and in-app music recognition costs from $2 to $5 per 1000 requests. First 300 requests for free.
I feel this.
Back in the 90s, there was a fantastic paint program for Mac called ColorIt! (The exclamation point is part of the name, though this is the last time I will respect that because it's obnoxious; lookin' at you, Yahoo!*)
It was a commercial product, but ColorIt 2.3 was eventually released as freeware after newer major versions were released for sale. 2.3 was everything I needed, and while I did try ColorIt 4.0, it didn't click with me the way 2.3 did. At the time I felt like they bowed to the pressure of Adobe's success and instead of playing to their unique strengths, they made ColorIt's UI a bit too much like Photoshop. So I stuck with version 2.3.
By the time Mac OS X came around, ColorIt was no longer in active development. But OS X had the "Classic" environment, something akin to an OS 9 VM tightly integrated into OS X. Classic apps didn't look or feel like native OS X apps, and running Classic came with a heavy RAM burden. But I did it anyway, because ColorIt 2.3 was da bomb.
I continued using ColorIt 2.3 up until Apple killed support for Classic in 10.6 Snow Leopard.
At that point, the intrepid developers came out of hiding and created a Carbon port of ColorIt 4.5 that could run natively on OS X. It was Carbon-only, which meant that it it didn't run natively on Intel Macs, but it did run thanks to Apple's Rosetta compatibility layer — at least until Apple axed that as well.
If I ever get into pixel art again, I'll probably run ColorIt 2.3 again in an OS 9 VM with Sheepshaver or whatever works best nowadays.
*That exclamation point is strictly to emphasize my disdain for Yahoo.
Holy crap. I had no idea YouTube was that bad. I guess my ad blockers work better than I thought.
It's going to be a never-ending cat-and-mouse game from here, I guess. And then eventually Google will make Chrome required with their trusted platform bs.
I've recently been looking into downloading offline copies of important data, since I don't expect that today's freely available information will continue to be freely available and accessible in perpetuity.
One problem I quickly ran into was that e.g. wikipedia downloads are not in an easily browsable format.
I found a project called Kiwix that packages datasets from a variety of free sources, like Wikipedia and Project Gutenberg, along with a reader application that can read these "zim" archives. The different data sources are available via torrents or direct downloads. https://wiki.kiwix.org/wiki/Content
I'm particularly interested in freely downloadable archives of scientific papers. A lot seems to be paywalled, or at least free-account-walled, even though the papers themselves are theoretically open-access. I would love to know of any sources out there to download an entire database locally.
Absolutely this. Phones are the primary device for Gen Z. Phone use doesn't develop tech skills because there's barely anything you can do with the phones. This is particularly true with iOS, but still applies to Android.
Even as an IT administrator, there's hardly anything I can do when troubleshooting phone problems. Oh, push notifications aren't going through? Well, there are no useful logs or anything for me to look at, so...cool. It makes me crazy how little visibility I have into anything on iPhones or iPads. And nobody manages "Android" in general; at best they manage like two specific models of one specific brand (usually Samsung or Google). It's impossible to manage arbitrary Android phones because there's so little standardization and so little control over the software in the general case.