[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 24 points 8 months ago

I feel like this enables the dick putting in process.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 174 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

For all of our safety, consider submitting a bugreport.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 81 points 11 months ago

Why are tax dollar being spent making it a little faster for rich FiDi people to get to JFK. Take the A train like the rest of us.

There is so much infrastructure NYC could improve:

  • Biking Infrastructure
  • More subway routes in Brooklyn
  • Better ties to PATH and LIRR
  • Expanded and more reliable bus infrastructure

And that is just what I can think in the moment.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 21 points 1 year ago

...and definitely not capitally punish them

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 42 points 1 year ago

The world would be a better place if companies deleted your information as soon as you delete your account.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 59 points 1 year ago

I would keep it simple and use the zoom web client and restrict as much as possible.

However, if you must have an app, they support linux. Then you can sandbox it as you would other apps on your machine.

Going into another partition might be a bit safer, but I'm not sure the privacy vs convinience tradeoff works.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 43 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Signal: Because I want better messaging, and somehow they already achieved some adoption.

Firefox: If Firefox can somehow make their browser miles ahead of chrome, I think that'd be just plain good for the world.

Gitea/Forgejo: I think Github is another one of these centralized platforms that's pretty ripe for disruption (and gitlab is just not gonna do it).

Lemmy: It'd be amazing to have all the kinks ironed out of lemmy.

Mastodon: Same thing as lemmy. Get social media out of the hands of big companies.

Mail-in-a-box: I want to be able to host my own email if I want to. Proton is great, but isn't email supposed to be an open standard?

Framework: Not exactly a software project, but man I'd love to see them get the time to push out a ton of great different products and really spark the right to repair movement. It's the first device I was actually excited to buy.

Linux Mint: I don't use mint, but it seems like one of the most user friendly distros. I would love for them to make everything perfect and create a seamless experience (and really make a year of the linux desktop). I also think it would be great to just have one clear frontrunner for new users.

Coreboot: Make firmware open source? Yes please.

Truly Open Source LLM: I really don't want this tech to be in just the hands of just a big company. I'd love for there to be an LLM that has not only it's weights open, but the full dataset, training methods and everything open.

I think when you just get 10 years of dev time, you get an opportunity to push a project ahead of all it's competitors. It is kind of interesting to get to pick and choose a project to be the frontrunner (even if they aren't currently).

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 30 points 1 year ago

“As we investigated available CAPTCHA options, we weren’t satisfied, so we decided to develop our own,” Eamonn Maguire

Based.

59
EXWM Zenburn (lemmy.world)

I used to lurk on unixporn a lot in the old place, but I never thought my setup was worth showing (no rounded corners, cool floating stuff, slick darcula themes). However...I'm supposed to be an active contributor here 😅

Everything is centered around EXWM which basically allows you to embed your x windows into an emacs buffer (turning emacs into a window manager).

The stuff

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 27 points 1 year ago

I'm probably from a younger generation, because as long as I have been around google has never felt like a choice for me. Instead, it was always the default or mandated by the organization I am a part of (university, other web services...). It's kinda a fight to get out of the google grasp.

Hearing you (and I guess the article towards the end) talk about google as not a monstrosity gives me hope that maybe other companies can push through and usurp google's "defaultness". It'd also be great if it was not another giant like microsoft giving competition.

I'd love to be able to a make a non-google choice and not feel like an outsider.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In the spirit of selfhosting, you can also host headscale. Its an open source implementation of the proprietary tailscale control plane.

It allows you to get over the ~~5~~ device limit (different depending on tiers), as well as keep your traffic on your devices. And, imo, it is pretty stable.

The only issue is that the control plane (by nature) has to be publically accessible. But imo it's way less of a security target than a massive app like nextcloud.

Edit: device limits were wrong

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 23 points 1 year ago

I really like hugo. Everything is written in Markdown and its pretty light. Definitely not as heavy as a full CMS. I also think the themes are pretty nice.

To deploy it you can use github pages or some cloud services (the hugo site lists some).

Its also pretty flexible, so its pretty easy to change how you want to deploy it, or change the look.

[-] ripe_banana@lemmy.world 38 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think using a framework is a unique experience. I don't worry about breaking it nearly as much as I did with my old thinkpads. Like my hardware key shorted itself and took my usb port with it. But, instead of it costing me a new laptop, it was 1 week, ~$10, and I was back in business.

Also, Linux support has been great so far. The only thing I had to do was install the brightness stuff they document.

I also heard they're working on coreboot, so that may be a thing. Also the fact that the motherboard is released to all repair shops is quite nice (at least there is some potential for some type of community audit).

Also, the laptop is super slick. The only complaint I have is maybe the battery life, but I'm not on the newest generation, and I don't know what has changed. Highly recommend.

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ripe_banana

joined 1 year ago