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Posts
2
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30
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I canceled spotify 2 yrs ago and switched to qobuz, music collection of 1500 songs. Some bought digitally, most ripped from cds. Happy as a clam!

  • my old laptop😅 and a bluetooth keyboard/touchpad. If it is not too noisy and performs well enough, I might make that a dedicated tv device (but then I will have to buy a new laptop lol, I've been drooling on framework for a while).

    Alternatively one of the n150 options, like you say. In which case I can update this post

  • Great tip, thanks!

  • Cool, using this setup now.

    Thinking of ways to make it more friendly for my SO and guests coming to visit or babysit etc, who are not used to linux (gnome). Any tips there?

    Top of mind is auto open browser on startup with fixed tabs for relevant streaming services. But could also be a simple wrapper of some kind, with UI similar to kodi, plex, jellyfin etc - but for accessing content on web.

  • Thx for the tip!

  • Thanks for the tip! I actually have an old intel celeron running as a server in the basement, so the bare minimum for this is playing media from the network. But, being able to play simple games could also be fun, so have to think about that one for a bit!

  • Thx for the tip!

  • Never heard of the brand/model, thanks! Will definately consider the latter

  • Thx, will try with an old dell xps13 in the meantime!

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Recommended mini linux device for streaming to TV

  • They're not a multi-billion dollar company. If you don't like it, then don't use it. That's your choice.

    But please stop talking nonsense about them not addressing real problems. Because they are. And they deserve credit for that. Not whining about the imperfections of a work in progress.

  • They're actively trying to solve:

    • e-waste and making devices last longer (contributing upstream)
    • escaping data harvesting and surveillance
    • offer an alternative to the mobile duopoly

    I'm baffled that they even bother, given how much people complain about it not being good enough. But I'm glad they do, and I think it's awesome.

  • Seems we are talking about different things here. By "perfect" I assumed you meant "complete", as opposed to an IM-log, e-mail, letters or other async communications.

    For people with medical conditions such as dementia, of course, this could solve real problems. I'm not saying we should pull the brakes in every case. My only point is that more data doesn't equal "better" in every case.

    Forgetting things are an underappreciated part of being human. Of course accumulating knowledge with science etc is what drives humanity forward. But when living our day to day lives, forgetting stuff is not just a bug, it's a feature. It enables us to move on, letting go, and revisit memories more organically and qualitatively. For example the rush of nostalgia that hits you when you randomly hear a song from your childhood. Compare this to prompting your local AI with "give me a perfect list of songs from my childhood".

    For example it's interesting to listen to accounts from savants with near perfect memories who talk about the struggles of remembering everything.

  • Would it?

    A chatlog of what everyone has ever said to you? Every misspeak, miscommunication, he-said-she-said, emotional comment? What problem would it solve?

    It might solve some problems, and introduce a shit ton of new ones. As technology always does.

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  • Update: I just came across Jami, which actually seems to check all the boxes! Libre, open source, videocalls/conferences, unrestricted traffic/quality, secure, p2p, available on all major platforms, etc etc. Even additional functionality such as recording.

    Time to do some testing! Also, thanks for all the info in previous post

  • I want to communicate with others in a way that is privacy friendly, gives a good user experience and gives me control of my data. Tox seems good, but most of my friends and family have iphones, and none of the clients support that. Today they use Whatsapp, Messenger, etc. Signal would be a big improvement, but as far as I can tell it is still centralized and wants your phone number.

    Maybe XMPP can work, I will check that out.

    P2P caught my interest because of the possibilities that opens up when you remove the middle-man/server (even better call quality, no file size limits). But it doesn't have to be P2P - I'm just a fan of "local first", decentralization and democratization of technology in general.

  • I already listed my reasons for wanting to try out/use it, and they have nothing to do with crypto or micropayments.

    If you can name alternatives with similar functionality made by people who are not affiliated with crypto, I'm all ears. Briar seems great for journalists and activists etc, but it is too limited to be used as a mainstream messenger for keeping in touch with friends and family. Seems like all you can do is send text and emojis, no video chat or photos.

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Keet and the potential of P2P technology

    keet.io