cthellis

joined 1 year ago
[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I like the aim and ethos, but not so much the design (other than interesting modularity) and certain things rub me the wrong way. And the pricing is just very out of line.

In the end, I'll just continue to do what I have been and keep old laptops running as long as possible. Have been using old IT-recycled housings or eBay purchases of "just the right thing" and swapped parts around, rebuilt the OS, etc. That's where much of the fun is anyway, heh.

I do wish the Fairphone were easier to come by in the US, tho.

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago
[–] cthellis@lemmy.world -5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Generally disagree. If you want the Fediverse to become a large open standard, if not the largest, then this is going to just be a matter of course. Companies will seek to commodify all their offerings, whether they use open standards or not. Many exist that commodify on top of open-source software and open standards. The important part is to ACHEIVE the open standard to begin with, and I think it's short-sighted to pre-emptively block something that could be a strong item down that path, and before it might show itself to be more harmful towards that goal.

It can always be blocked later, situation-depending.

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm in IT and work with normies all day, the number of people to whom even just that will flummox and they'll just not bother is frankly overwhelming. 😝

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Has interesting possibilities, to be sure. But a whole lot of the harder sci-fi stuff seem to really fall off a cliff before the end. XD

Daughter weeping over mama's "two week reset" doesn't land quite right for me, tho. I can understand a bit of confusion, but her trade-off is between "dead mama" and "minorly reset mama." And they knew what they were getting into by making the backup to begin with.

Needed a much bigger discrepancy/timeframe involved to sell it. Like, if the backup happened a year+ prior, not merely a couple weeks.

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago (3 children)

"Exclusively?" No. But obviously its initial appeal was to the more tech-savvy and FOSS-centric sort, and it's byzantine enough to jump in that it dissuades many newcomers who try.

But ActivityPub does seem to look like it will pull in larger services (like Threads) so in the end "protocols over platforms" may win out by default, sorts like WebKit/Blink/Chromium has. Not everyone gonna use Brave or Opera, but the mass of Chrome users will still feed back in some fashion.

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Don't you mean... autoMACically?

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago

I am not sure what other alternatives there are? I'm receptive to anything good. Right now this looks like it has promise, so I'll go for the ride.

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

The only thing I can really suggest is to start culling some of the worst, and introduce some counter-influences like debunkers, in hopes of her feed organically at least introducing some of that to her over time.

I am not sure if she would watch, but there is at least the possibility. Even if you kill her account in some fashion, if she just rejoins and starts looking for the same stuff again...

[–] cthellis@lemmy.world 29 points 1 year ago

Reddit basically lost any semblance of respect the community should have for it. You know, the people who give them all their content and do all their moderation for free.

Fuck 'em high.