• 1 Post
  • 52 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
cake
Cake day: August 5th, 2023

help-circle










  • There are multiple reasons I can think of. First, the entry barrier is quite high in comparison to other social media platforms and might filter out many unmotivated or technically inexperienced people. Second, moderation seems to work different on Lemmy than on other platforms. Where other platforms try to be “free-speech” (which they seem to misunderstand as letting anyone say whatever blatantly false stuff they want), Lemmy moderators seem to be more strict in that regard and generally enforce stricter rules.


  • I’m with you with (distribution) choice (that’s definitely stressful, especially when you aren’t used to actually having to choose what kind of computing experience you want) but driver/program distribution on Linux is less painful/easier than on Windows on average. If your hardware happens to be supported, everything should work out of the box without the need to install drivers; the biggest problem for more or less average users would be having to install Nvidia drivers if they have a Nvidia GPU. Installing software is generally as easy as opening your distribution’s software store, searching what you need and hitting the install button.


  • because it’s insanely difficult to get along completely without YouTube. Or if you happen to have some kind of business it’s easier said than done to “just not optimize” for Google products or “just not use Google services” like having a Google Maps entry. On a side note, even getting a privacy focused smartphone without using Google services and products is near to impossible (e.g. GrapheneOS only works on Pixel phones…)



    • I’ve did some distrohopping and in effect switched from Fedora to Fedora Silverblue (very enjoyable)
    • I’ve completely removed all centralized social media apart from YouTube (I’ll have to invest some more time in PeerTube before I can make the switch) from my life
    • In general I spend less time doom-scrolling and way more time actually reading interesting stuff (I’ve found LessWrong, a forum about the art of rationality/more rational thinking)
    • I have replaced all remaining proprietary software components on my desktop with open source ones (e.g. I now use FOSS frontends for Discord and Spotify, namely gtkcord4 and Spot), the only exceptions being the Nvidia driver (I hope that will change in 2024 with NVK) and some games (although 80% of my very limited gaming time is now spent in open source games like Beyond All Reason)
    • I got a tablet/ChromeBook convertible (Lenovo IdeaPad Duet 5 8GB) which I installed PostmarketOS on and am now daily driving Linux in school where everybody else is using iPads
    • I am in the process of finally building my own NAS/homeserver
    • On the negative side I spent way less of my free time programming than I would have liked to

    I do also have some goals and ambitions for this year:

    • Host all my stuff on my own server, this includes files (documents, photos, backups, media) as well as services like my website and automations
    • Write audio and camera drivers for my tablet
    • Learn some more Nim
    • Write more code than last year
    • Finally make the switch to Vim/NeoVim
    • Become independent from YouTube
    • If my iPhone happens to break, get a Linux phone as a daily driver
    • Gradually unsubscribe from (streaming) services like Spotify