fievel

@fievel@lemm.ee
4 Post – 66 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

C++ Software Engineer Big interest in OpenSource communities for years now. 20+ years linux user. But a newbies in fediverse, had heard about it before but needed the help of twitter (for mastodon) and reddit changes to give a real try. Also a fan of Stephen King books. Was fievel@vlemmy.net

I think a bit the opposite: I'm really worried about the trend to give people only information they care about. I think it's essential to be able to have information about everything. Of course there will always be stuff you don't care about but having it automatically filtered out is dangerous in my opinion. In GAFA-powered social networks, you are only given pieces of information about your own opinion, you never have something that make you question yourself about your opinion. The power of independent and open media like Lemmy is to not rely on such biasing algorithms.

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A bit on the costly stuff but I find the vacuum cleaner robot (not sure it's called this in English) very useful. The house is cleaner to be vacuumed every day (even if it's not as efficient as manual vacuuming or cleaning). Especially with pets and children.

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I think that one of the structural change that helped a lot to have less stalled or unmaintained open source projects is the improvement in the DevOps tools.

I mean that, until recently, I always had been an open source user and supporter but, despite being a professional software engineer, I never coded in open source projects. The reason to this is that I did not wanted to commit myself into a project that I cannot afford to work regularly on because of professional and/or personal time constraints.

Now with the broad use of git and related platforms for open source projects (GitHub, gitlab, ...), it's possible to work only a little on open source projects. You can fix a bug impacting you as an user, translate some strings in your native language, improve the doc, ... without commiting to work regularly on the project. You just change the stuff, have no requirements to inform anyone, make a pull request and it's merged or not by the maintener ...

I think this is really what contributed to improvement in the way open source projects evolved.

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A good one IMHO is Omnivore.

Omnivore is a complete, open source read-it-later solution for people who love to read.

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Exactly this is the problem, when I talk non-geek (including my wife) about privacy they answer "what the hell have you to hide !" ... It's so difficult to convince people :'(

A good chair for sure. I think this is the most valuable thing you can ask for.

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Recently switched to Duck Duck Go and honestly I find the results better than Google. More accurate, less "sponsored" results, ...

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Internet Relay Chat.

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The stand, by Stephen King

Please define "normal people". ;)

Indeed, being Belgian and an adept of the real French fries (double cooked) I was not convinced at all. In the end, I still prefer real fries but I find the air fryer very practical to cook (or warm up quickly - unlike microwave oven it does not make stuff soft) all sort of food.

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The Ukraine-Russia war because I live in western Europe and fear the possible consequence (some already occurred like energy and goods prices raise).

D. J. Trump justice issues since I think that's important for judging the health of our democracies.

Really happy with this fork, using it for several months now. Also occasionally Unexpected Keyboard for termux / ssh / code ....

Nowadays it's video for everything... Am I the only old bear that prefer plain old textual tutorials?

Very interesting post, congrats...

The more I read and see about AI / deep learning and the more I feel anxious...

I'm anxious because we seen during the covid crisis how many people were easily convinced of fake news and complotist theories that were by no way realistic, now I imagine that with the power of a forged argumentation from chatgpt and deep fake from midjourney... How to convince people they are wrong then...

I'm also anxious about the changes that will occur in the job I love, software engineering... I don't want to spend the rest of my life fixing bug in code automatically generated by an AI. Or worse to loose my job because some manager think I can be replaced easily by a bot ...

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I'd like to thank you all for all your interesting comments and opinion.

I see a general trends not being too worried because of how the technology works.

The worrysome part being what capitalism and management can think but that's just an update of the old joke "A product manager is a guy that think 9 women can make a baby in 1 month". And anyway, if not that there will be something else, it's how our society is.

Now, I feel better, and I understand that my first point of view of fear about this technology and rejection of it is perhaps a very bad idea. I really need to start using it a bit in order to known this technology. I already found some useful use cases that can help me (get inspiration while naming things, generate some repetitive unit test cases, using it to help figuring out about well-known API, ...).

rotfl

Well I seen, I even code reviewed without knowing, when I asked colleague what happened to him, he said "I used chatgpt, I'm not sure to understand what this does exactly but it works". Must confess that after code review comments, not much was left of the original stuff.

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Not sure, people outside IT world, at least in my country, still speak about the "Microsoft crash" and don't know at all about Crowdstrike. Now that make me think that MS will probably try to sue them for the "ravages" to their corporate image.

Exactly, this makes me very anxious. Feeling that we're just cutting the branch we are sit on ...

So I'll contribute with my list too.

Most used utilities apps:

  • Droid-ify: F-droid repositories client in modern design for Android. (NeoStore is nice too but I find this one more stable)
  • Obtainium: For stuff either not available on f-droid mirrors or for "young" projects, in order to have latest updates sooner.
  • MJ PDF
  • Barcode Scanner
  • Simple Gallery
  • Unexpected Keyboard: for programming/CLI stuff
  • yetCalc: Calculator and units converter
  • Acode editor: Android code/text editor
  • Termux
  • OsmAnd: Maps and navigation software (Using it from play store because I pay a subscription to support the devs while doing hiking)
  • Copy to clipboard: Add an action in Android "share to" to copy shared text to clipboard
  • Coffee: Utility to force keep screen on for a configured delay
  • LinkSheet: Allow to configure App chooser properly for URL opening even with Android 12+
  • Breezy Weather: Provide weather from many providers in a beautiful UI
  • Fedilab: Mastodon client
  • Voyager: Lemmy client
  • Feeder: RSS client
  • LibreTube: Android interface to piped to watch YouTube videos with privacy in mind
  • Authenticator Pro: Two-factor authenticator TOTP/HOTP manager
  • BitWarden: Password manager

Games (because it can help fighting boredom when in a waiting room or so):

IMHO the website is sufficiently usable on a mobile browser. You can still use "add to home screen" to have a shortcut on your favorite launcher.

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First two instances I blocked as soon my instance switched to .19 :) My "all" feed is so good now

Dumb question, but I'm sure I'm not the only one ... What is CSAM? And what the acronym means?

I'm volunteer to donate because of I accidentally die, rather that it deserve someone who would have more luck than me rather than no one.

Now in Belgium it works a bit differently. Everyone is, by default, considered as a donor.

You can then register to either refuse it or to impose it whatever your family says.

This is because the law is that the doctors must always ask the family if they are ok to give organs from diseased family member even with the "by default donor", with the registration you can say "don't ask my family and just do it".

This can be used in two situation in my opinion, the first one being family that have different conviction and may refuse despite the opinion of the diseased. The second situation (mine) being not wanting to worry grieving family with one more difficult decision to take.

Now from the article (which might have been updated since posted, no criticism of OP), it's clearly unrelated to the football (soccer) match. Seems more related to the events in Israel...

Learned a few (meaning of foobar,...), remembered some and enjoyed a lot. thanks for the link.

Yeah of course, it depends on the method and lot of things. Anyway, I agree with you, I'm happy with the content and the spirit of the users (less trolls and haters than on reddit or commercial social networks, more like the internet users I knew late 90s or beginning 2000s).

For notes I'm using Joplin with sync with desktop client through a nextcloud instance. Really a very nice app if you want sync with multiple devices anc user friendly interface.

For maps OsmAnd, I even pay a subscription to support the project (and have hourly updated maps which is pretty cool when I fix wood paths in openstreetmap).

I was born in 1984 :D

Of course, it's the best proto for chat, I use it actively everyday since 1997.

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I think you raise a very good point about explaining the problem... Even us as "smart humans" have often great difficulty to see the point while reading PM specs...

I recently started using Duck Duck Go instead of Google.

I still had this thought that Google was the best technology as I went from the early web (remember... altavista.digital.com, yahoo, ...) and I remember that Google was really a game changer when it started to become popular.

I tested setting DDG as default search engine in my desktop and mobile browsers, thinking that when I don't have expected results I would go to Google... I never had to switch to Google because I was wrong, DDG is as good as Google while being better from privacy point of view.

For the browser I use Vivaldi on both android and desktop.

So simple, no images, no videos, no bullshit this just works... Now mainly out of habits and because I have some friends on it... Also some nostalgia about the time internet was more than http and so on

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Nice tool, didn't knew about it, seems far more convenient for dumb end users than what I use right now.

Either setup http/ftp servers but that's painful to explain, or use services over Internet which is a shame on local network...

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I read every night with a kobo e-reader (next to my partner who generally sleep before me). I use night mode and a very dim brightness (2-3 %, the max I use is 4 %). It's sufficient in my opinion.

What is considered as active ? Is someone connecting to his account and lurking considered active ? Or, someone who just up/downvote without commenting or posting ?

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