Glad I deleted my account last week.
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utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Meta announces always online DRM for all existing and future Quest VR devices7·4 days agoWhich isn’t standalone (or “all in one” as I imagine they meant). I have an Index and a SteamDeck. I can’t wait to buy something at the intersection of both.
normal window user who don’t know what a terminal is. Most of them even freak out when they see “the black box with text on it”.
Good point! That being said I’m wondering how we could help anybody, genuinely being inclusive, on how to transform that feeling of dread, basically “Oh, that’s NOT for me!”, to “Hmmm that’s the challenging part but it seems worth it and potentially feasible, I should try”. I believe it’s important because in turn the “normal window user” could potentially understand limitations hidden to them until now. They would not instantly better understand how their computer work but the initial reaction would be different, namely considering a path of learning.
Any idea or good resources on that? How can we both demystify the terminal with a pleasant onboarding? How about a Web based tutorial that asks user to try side by side to manipulate files? They’d have their own desktop with their file manager on one side (if they want to) and the browser window with e.g. https://copy.sh/v86/ (WASM) this way they will lose no data no matter what.
Maybe such examples could be renaming files with ImagesHoliday_WrongName.123.jpg to ImagesHoliday_RightName.123.jpg then doing that for 10 files, then 100 files, thus showing that it does scale and enables ones to do things practically impossible without the terminal.
Another example could be combining commands, e.g. ls to see files then wc -l to count how many files are in directory. That would not be very exciting so then maybe generating an HTML file with the list of files and the file count.
Honestly I believe finding the right examples that genuinely showcases the power of the terminal, the agency it brings, is key!
I recommend letting content creators about this and suggesting alternatives, e.g. PeerTube instances, Vimeo, etc.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is there a way to send your phone calls to your laptop?2·7 days agoInteresting, I knew they provide SIM for non eSIM phones (have a JMP SIM on the way with its USB adapter) but didn’t know about that service. Can you please explain a bit more how it works?
PS: for Europeans who worry about tariffs, mine wasn’t sent from the US, or Canada, but rather Netherlands, FWIW.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•A book on escaping surveillance capitalism/the broligarchy1·9 days agoas how to change your default browser and search engine, suggestions for different OS’s and how to install them on any kind of computer, different options for Microsoft software, etc. For example, I’m on a Mac just because it’s still good and I don’t want to pay for a new one…I’d love either some simple ways to “harden” it and/or install Linux.
Wonderful, I can do that! I indeed assume that people just don’t “want” to install Linux because they think Windows, or other Microsoft products, is “good enough” for them but maybe they just don’t know how or imagine they don’t have the ability to do so. That’s a great suggestion I’ll try to address it soon, thanks!
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•How to lock down your phone if you’re traveling to the U.S.7·10 days agobuy the burner device in the US
Can you trust it then though?
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•How to lock down your phone if you’re traveling to the U.S.6·10 days agoWith sxmo as the interface.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•A book on escaping surveillance capitalism/the broligarchy1·10 days agoAh… thanks! Well let me ask then, if there was another “Beyond Monopoly” video that could be less “advanced” what would you like it to be about?
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Grant funding for helping people get away from big tech1·10 days agoFWIW I believe it’s mostly, if not only, for code.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•A book on escaping surveillance capitalism/the broligarchy0·11 days agoMy pleasure, thanks for sharing all this important knowledge!
PS: I have few related things on https://fabien.benetou.fr/Cookbook/DigitalSelfSovereignty so I’d be curious to hear your opinion on it.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•A book on escaping surveillance capitalism/the broligarchy0·12 days agoLink https://www.punchinguppress.com/post/disengage-from-the-internet and ToC :
Part 1: Why Disengage? Chapter 1: What We’re Fighting Against Chapter 2: How Do We Reclaim Our Lives By Disengaging? Chapter 3: Giants In The Dark Part 2: Disengage By…Reclaiming Your Data Chapter 4: Pay Attention to Privacy Policies Chapter 5: Control Your Online Accounts Chapter 6: Bash The Brokers Chapter 7: Surf In Secret Chapter 8: Escape Email Tracking Chapter 9: Protect Your Phone Chapter 10: Stop Being Loyal Part 3: Disengage By…Reclaiming Your Home Chapter 11: Hide Your Home Address Chapter 12: Remove Your Home Photos From The Web Chapter 13: Banish Smart Products From Your Spaces Part 4: Disengage By…Reclaiming Your Content Chapter 14: Protect Your Posts Chapter 15: Retract Your Reviews Chapter 16: Say Sayonara To Social Media Part 5: Disengage By…Reclaiming Your Attention Chapter 17: Don’t Surf If You Don’t Need To Chapter 18: Annihilate Ads Chapter 19: Say See Ya To Your Smartphone Chapter 20: Ghost Corporate News Part 6: Disengage By…Quitting The Big 4 Chapter 21: Say Goodbye To Google Chapter 22: Say Au Revoir To Amazon Chapter 23: Say Arrivederci To Apple Chapter 24: Say Mmm-Bye To Microsoft Part 7: Live Your Life
I haven’t dig into it but I’d check https://lucaweiss.eu/post/2024-06-24-esim-manager-for-mobile-linux/ i.e. yes, in theory “normal” distributions as you list “should” support it… but rarely do modems on desktop (or even laptops?) support eSIM. Consequently it’s more on other devices, e.g. phones, and those tend to have dedicated distributions, e.g. PostMarketOS on a FairPhone but not on PinePhone as it doesn’t have eSIM support.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•EU push for open source, GIMP3 is out, Firefox gets webapps back_ Linux & Open Source News0·29 days agoIt’s federated, so one can setup whatever instance they want on whatever domain they want.
If the admin feels “.wtf” is edge, cool. If someone else believe it’s NSFW or wouldn’t help promote the cause, they can setup another instance on another domain. If the content itself is federated, they might share that link instead.
A group having rule is fine, in fact it’s needed for the group to sustain over time.
Unfortunately if this group is hoarding a resources, here a very popular meeting point for people who (in theory) care about “privacy” then the rule itself does not have to be “fair” or “right”.
So sure, when joining a group one must aware of the rules of said group, but it does not in itself means the rules of that group are automatically correct. I’m not saying here the rule is fine (I do have a personal opinion about it) but rather that this kind of event if precisely canary in the coalmine showing the genuine nature of the group, not what its name claims to be.