[-] vahtos@programming.dev 108 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Let's not forget an important distinction here. This man is not making any of these things, and he isn't capable of making them. But, he is capable of directly and indirectly impacting the people who are capable of making them negatively enough that we get utter failures like the cybertruck.

Don't give him more credit than he deserves.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 71 points 1 month ago

They generally have really great linux support for all of their hardware (touchpads, fingerprint readers, etc.), and provide bios updates via fwdup. They are also just nice laptops.

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Laptop/Lenovo

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 48 points 1 month ago

Showing free demos as their own line item in the store suggestions feels counterintuitive. As a user, I don't want this, it just clusters the interface. I want to see the main game and something on it indicating a demo is available.

As for developers, discoverability is something they are always talking (complaining) about. Artificially inflating the sheer number of competing games for visibility seems like an odd choice in that regard.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 66 points 2 months ago

Well, we can't have felons voting. They should only be allowed to run for president!

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 92 points 2 months ago

So, a dark pattern is a design that tries to trick the user into something. But what is the word for "knowing what the user wants, blatantly ignoring it and imposing the companies will anyway"?

Example: I think YouTube shorts are a terrible format, and I find them generally irritating. So I click the X on the element in YouTube that has a bunch of side scrolling cards, where each card is one of these shorts. YouTube informs me it will hide them for 30 days and then they'll be back.

Another example, Windows Update. I've set all the group policy settings so it should never restart and update without me triggering it. But, if I allow it to download the update, then damn my group policy settings, it is going to apply that update and restart whenever it wants.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 48 points 2 months ago

This is making me realize that I have never encountered this equivalent of a blue screen of death on Linux.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 42 points 3 months ago

Losing the Internet Archive would be a huge loss. Unfortunately, greedy companies don't want us to have nice things.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 264 points 5 months ago

It's so ridiculous that this isn't even brought up:

The Command you provided worked fine. Thank you so much for the help! Really appreciated! We are going to proceed to make a release today and test with customers. Will post the updates here.

Gotta love being a forced beta tester... I mean customer.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 25 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Their CEO has gone out of his way to shit talk Linux multiple times on Twitter/X, spreading false information, he is also vehemently against doing the bare minimum to allow their games to work on Linux (enabling EAC support for proton in their games, which by their own words is just a checkbox). They also have no Linux support in their embarrassment of a launcher, which is why everyone recommends Heroic, even when using Windows because it actually has features.

A one time donation of what amounts to an insignificant rounding error for them to try to appease people unhappy with their stance on Linux does not mean they are not "against" Linux.

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 24 points 1 year ago

Russia says

So he's definitely (not) dead, right?

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 53 points 1 year ago

A cryptocurrency miner. It uses your computer to generate currency, which costs you resources (electricity, compute power, etc.).

[-] vahtos@programming.dev 54 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Some of that seems unnecessary (device boot time). But it's not all scary spooky tracking. Some permissions/information is required for certain features.

For example, you can't rotate your app UI if you're not allowed to know screen orientation. Or maybe they do a low power mode if device battery is low, or a warning that the app might not function well if the OS or device is old.

Not saying you're wrong or that Discord is right. Just pointing out that a long list of permissions isn't on its own a bad thing, if those permissions are required for specific features, and not just for the sake of data harvesting.

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vahtos

joined 1 year ago