Google threatened tech influencers unless they ‘preferred’ the Pixel
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    fury
    2mo ago 93%

    Give it a few more years. At this rate, by 2028, the entire back of the phone will be camera bump and you'll be able to lay it down on a flat surface at last.

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  • Here are the best Google Maps alternatives for finding your way: With a number of community-driven, open-source mapping projects, picking a navigation app without ads or tracking has never been easier
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    fury
    3mo ago 100%

    I'm looking for one that works well on Android Automotive. So far I couldn't get OsmAnd to show the Android Auto UI on the full OS, or integrate with the home page (split screen music / maps), and none of the others I tried in F-droid worked at all. I need something because I'm tired of using my phone, and I don't have Google services on my tablet (flashed with a custom build of Lineage / Android Automotive OS).

    It would be nice to have an open source version of the big screen systems they're putting in the newest cars...

    3
  • Cars Are Rolling Computers Now. So What Happens When They Stop Getting Updates?
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    fury
    3mo ago 100%

    Imagine something as outlandish as user serviceable infotainment systems. Like they used to have in the old days. I'm hanging on by a thread to my basic 2014 car which still has a double DIN slot I can put my own system into...some day

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  • Cars Are Rolling Computers Now. So What Happens When They Stop Getting Updates?
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    fury
    3mo ago 100%

    The company that didn't see the 3G sunset coming, I would think. I know auto moves slow, but damn...4G was out for what, 4-5 years before development likely started on the 2019 model year?

    3
  • Cars Are Rolling Computers Now. So What Happens When They Stop Getting Updates?
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    fury
    3mo ago 95%

    How is the 3G sunset not solvable by just swapping out a modem module for an LTE or 5G one and maybe installing some new modem firmware? A lot of cars are running a Linux kernel under the hood, so I'd think it's pretty well swap and go

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  • Windows 3.1 saves the day during CrowdStrike outage — Southwest Airlines scrapes by with archaic OS
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    fury
    3mo ago 100%

    Windows 3.1 did have a BSOD. It wasn't always fatal, you could try to hit enter to go back to Windows, but most of the time it wasn't really recoverable, Windows often wouldn't work right afterwards.

    I ran into them all the time in 3.11 on our 486 which had some faulty RAM (the BSOD would even be scrambled). If we could get back to Windows after that, it'd just be in a zombie state where moving the mouse around would paint stuff over whatever was left on screen, and wouldn't respond to clicks or keypresses.

    Fun times.

    17
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    Jump
    The Banff Wildlife Crossing Project in Alberta, Canada, is essentially a bridge for animals & has reduced animal-vehicle collisions in the area by more than 80%
    HP bricks ProBook laptops with bad BIOS delivered via automatic updates — many users face black screen after Windows pushes new firmware
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    fury
    4mo ago 100%

    How do these things not have unbrickable A/B firmware partitions by now? Even I have that on a $2 microcontroller. Self-test doesn't pass after an update? Instant automatic rollback to the previous working partition.

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  • Windows 10 is EOL in October 2025
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    fury
    5mo ago 84%

    I'd love to comply, but unfortunately the last time I tried Windows 11, my Ethernet and WiFi quit working and I had to roll back ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ how do you screw up something as basic and necessary as the internet connection?

    13
  • Winamp is going open source, and it feels like the early 2000s again
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    fury
    5mo ago 83%

    I wonder what the aim is. Trying to get relevant again? I haven't used Winamp in many many years. I'm a Spotify / YouTube kind of guy now. I drank the koolaid. It's a little late and things like VLC have a pretty solid offering now, without all gotchas that this will have (such as you apparently can't call it Winamp and will have to sign away a sacrificial child to actually get the code)

    4
  • welp ...
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    fury
    5mo ago 100%

    I like my Kubernetes setup at work. It runs Nextcloud, Mattermost, GitLab, company website, several embedded firmware OTA update sites, a few internal apps. Nextcloud was pretty easy to install on it with Helm, just a single command line and a yaml file to specify domain, settings, etc. I had some teething issues in my early setup where the database would get wiped inexplicably, but it's been running smooth for years now. (Yes, I know, bad juju running databases on Kubernetes...I'm used to it and it mostly works)

    1
  • konstakang.com

    Courtesy of KonstaKANG

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    Hot take incoming. Just some thoughts I've been having recently as I experience Linux at work for several years now. To clarify, I mean Linux on the desktop as a consumer. As in, what our lord and savior Richard M. Stallman would call "GNU/Linux"; pick your favorite distro here. I'm leaving out Linux on the server, embedded Linux, and the billions of phones running Android that have Linux kernels, for which Linux there is a success story without rival. But Linux as a daily driver OS as a user/developer just...sucks. I **have** to use it because there is no other option for building Android and embedded Linux which I occasionally need to do I **like** to use it because I can change stuff about it that I don't like (*can* being the key word, here, usually I'm too lazy or busy) I **want** to use it because getting one over on 'the man' tickles my rebellious funny bone But...little things here and there like [snap sandboxing the browser and preventing a standard web feature from working](https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/chromium-browser/+bug/1890365) bite me in the ass every now and again. In this one obscure case, supposedly it's been fixed, but I'm on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, so who knows, maybe the fix didn't get shipped out to this old dinosaur. Whatever it is, I don't want to spend the time to dig into the innards to find out what's causing it this time, and just uninstalled chromium from snap. (I thought I installed it through apt, but it turns out [apt install chromium-browser just installs the snap instead](https://snapcraft.io/blog/chromium-in-ubuntu-deb-to-snap-transition). I *get it*, I read the post, I understand why they moved it to snap, I'm just annoyed to be one of the lucky 2 people that ran into WebSerial not working because of this or some related series of decisions.) ~~I usually use Brave, and I had already found out the hard way they [ripped WebSerial out](https://github.com/brave/brave-browser/issues/13902) leading me to try Chromium~~ I sighed, installed Google Chrome with Google's apt repo, WebSerial works, I moved on. ^for^ ^some^ ^reason^ ^I^ ^can't^ ^get^ ^it^ ^to^ ^talk^ ^to^ ^my^ ^custom^ ^ESP32^ ^board^ ^anyway,^ ^but^ ^that's^ ^another^ ^problem^ ^I^ ^have^ ^to^ ^figure^ ^out^ ^some^ ^other^ ^time^ Had I been using Windows or Mac at that particular time (or had I already been using Big Brother Google™ in the first place), I wouldn't have run into this obstacle that cost me a few hours. And that's not the only time I've ever encountered something that took some time to research and work around ~~or learn to accept, don't fight it, no tears, only free software now~~ Stuff like that reminds me why Linux on the desktop is not receiving more mainstream adoption. It's not just esoteric electronics-geeks-only features that I mean, either. Basic ordinary stuff like the screen sleeping when I don't want it to, or not sleeping when I do want it to (thanks VirtualBox), or the lack of overall polish, like YES THANK YOU i know you've found the very same printer yet again as you've popped up a notification about it the last 500 times I woke up my computer. I'm sure I could fix any particular thing given enough time to investigate, but man, I just want my stuff to work so I can do my actual work. As the old adage goes, "it's only free if you don't value your time". Imagine someone less technically inclined trying to cope with an issue like this...they're probably fine if they had a friend set up their Linux box and all they need to do is browse Facebook and get their Gmail. But if they need anything more elaborate than that, they're stepping into a minefield of gotchas. Need to reflash your phone? Better hope your browser wasn't installed via snap, or you gotta enable the raw-usb feature and hope your distro is new enough to have that fix. (when was the last time aunt sallie needed to reflash her phone?) In a world where everybody can change things, everybody's got a different way to solve something, and some of them occasionally break stuff. There's no unified vision, nor any single authority figure with some common sense saying "why are we doing it like this, this sucks, fix it". The thought occurred to me, macOS (my other main daily driver) is a much easier and more pleasant *nix to use because people get paid to work on **the product**, which is something I can't say for Linux. * Desktop environment rich with window management features and surprisingly few glitches (I say this just as a notification popped up on my Linux box and won't go away; I'm clicking on the x right now and it's just clicking on something underneath the notification...sigh.) * One unified app store that has a good enough selection for most people * Developers can still hack things up * Sleeps when I shut the lid * Wakes up when I open the lid * Runs browsers with any and all features intact ^except^ ^Brave,^ ^because^ ^fsck^ ^you,^ ^we^ ^don't^ ^trust^ ^our^ ^users^ ^enough^ ^to^ ^let^ ^you^ ^run^ ^WebSerial^ * A team is paid to make sure it's accessible while blind, deaf, limited motion (and maybe that accessibility focus trickles down to benefit the average user too) There are companies, RedHat, SUSE, Canonical, et al, who get paid in a sense, but my gross oversimplification of the matter is they don't really get paid to work on Linux **as a product**, they get paid to tell businesses how to use Linux and other free stuff to work around issues navigating what is otherwise a proprietary-software-dominated world. "But all my Microsoft Office™ files..." They work just fine in LibreOffice! That'll be $2,500. "Our team really likes Slack..." Have you tried [zulip/mattermost/insert other open source Slack clone flavor of the month]? Thanks, pay $1,000 at the next window. That means Linux **the product** only gets the free fixes, for the most part. The fixes where some user crosses the Venn diagram between giving enough of a shit, being frustrated *just enough* by an issue, and having the ability and time to just go and fix it themselves and contribute the patch / PR / whatnot. Or the fixes that were sponsored by a company in the process of using the code for their product or service--if the company cares enough to upstream it (or doesn't care one way or the other) Maybe I'm just suffering Ubuntu-itis and I can sort everything out by hopping over to Debian ~~or arch btw~~. At least until the next issue I run into. Does anybody else get tired of this, or is it just me? *I ain't reading all that crap* edition: Linux on the desktop sucks because nobody gets paid to fix it, they only get paid by businesses to tell them how to shoehorn Linux into their business world. ^oh^ ^god^ ^i^ ^spent^ ^so^ ^much^ ^time^ ^whining^ ^about^ ^this^ ^that^ ^i^ ^could^ ^have^ ^spent^ ^coding^

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