[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

I think you're wildly underestimating the cost of people's time, resources, infrastructure etc

"You can't have it both ways" is exactly right. If the internet was user funded, as in, the user subscribes to every website or internet service they wish to use, then the internet would probably stop existing. (maybe I'm being too dramatic but also maybe not)

What's the true cost of YouTube without ads or data harvesting? Probably only the rich could afford a subscription, which in turn would destroy the platform user base.

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 13 points 1 year ago

Absolutely agree with your comment.

I don't really know the solution either... I can't afford to pay for all the things I enjoy online.

I was considering supporting 1 Twitch streamer I enjoy until I saw subscription cost. And if I paid that for every streamer or YouTuber I enjoy, I'd be broke in a single day lol.

I get so much incredibly good info and discussions online about my hobbies, all for no charge.

I used to subscribe on Patreon to my most useful resources/people, but in the end I just could afford it and had to cancel all my Patreon

I hate ads but I don't understand how the internet would function without ads. No one could afford it

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

In an 8 hour day, I'd say probably 7 hours

The other hour probably bathroom trips, coffee/water breaks, occasional quick chats with coworkers throughout the day

I can't hit a full 8 hours actual work unless I do a 9 hour day.

Sometimes I have a shorter lunch break or try not to poop until I get home lol, so I can hit 8 hours quicker

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

I'm still on Nova because it just works so right for me, many others I tried didn't.

My needs are very basic

  • A home screen I can place icons in specific positions (eg not forced auto sort)
  • folders (drag multiple icons on top of each other to create a group/folder)
  • Message count on icons, e.g my Whatsapp icon should show a little number indicating amount of new messages
  • and finally, an app drawer showing all apps in a single list (without any fancy grouping)

Maybe this is normal now but years ago Nova seemed to be the only one that offered all these basic features together

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago

I just found every little thing so hard in Linux.

Screens, scaling, nvidia drivers, games... Even spent an hour on gnome trying to get my desktop background image to fill the whole screen instead of repeating to fill the space. Solution ended up being download an image editor and resize the image to be the exact same size as my screen resolution. Tried KDE and kept hitting 100% CPU bug

In the end I just wanted a pc that worked, so went back to Windows with WSL.

Seems a perfect combo. Do my dev in WSL, and the desktop just works.

However I'm getting increasingly frustrated at every UI change Microsoft make... Which is what made me try Linux in the first place. If Microsoft Win7 and early 10 was great, I wish they'd stop touching UI and just improve under the hood

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

What's wrong with your pc if Task Manager runs like ass lol.

Task Manager is like... The one thing guaranteed to run on a potato

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

What is wrong with flat pack? I heard they were good

(noob question probably)

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I preferred the usability, searchability and content of reddit.

Hopefully lemmy eventually catches up

Using a 3rd party app of course, hated the native reddit website/app

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Thanks for your reply.

I've heard many people mentioning EndevourOS and I think that's based on Arch?

EndevourOS was top of my list to try next time I'm willing to give Linux another shot.

The most interesting distro I tried was MicroOS (opensuse immutable). I really liked the immutable concept, keeping the base OS clean and mess around inside containers. Very cool

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

It's really the phrasing "average joe". I would genuinely give the average Joe a strong recommendation to not self host.

A beginner wanting to learn to be more techy and willing to put in hours for troubleshooting etc? Sure go ahead. But thats definitely not the average Joe.

My biggest advice to a beginner would be to buy a spare budget router, plug it into your ISP router, plug your pc into the new router and do all your messing around in your own network.

Break the internet because of bad configure? No stress, it's only your little network, your flatmates/family aren't yelling at you.

Can't figure out what you did wrong and want the internet back to search? Just plug your pc back to the untouched ISP router so you get internet again

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 85 points 1 year ago

Self hosting nothing changed my life.

So much free time and less stress once I abandoned self hosting ๐Ÿ˜…

[-] ryncewynd@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago

I heard of Beehaw first but I got rejected twice when trying to make an account, so I tried World next and here I am.

Also don't understand how things work, so wasn't really sure what lemmy.ml was but I read it didn't matter where you created an account so I just stuck with World ๐Ÿคท

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ryncewynd

joined 1 year ago