arcterus
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arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto politics @lemmy.world•Larry Ellison Just Quietly Became the Most Powerful Man in AmericaEnglish32·5 days agoMakes sense that a giant shithead is supporting another giant shithead.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK about Changing your Profile Picture to ClippyEnglish1·6 days agoI think if they kept the features but made it close everything by default it’d be pretty good (asking if you want to save before closing). I basically don’t see a real reason to keep stuff open with apps like this, honestly.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@lemmy.ml•What problems does Linux have to overcome to get more usersEnglish41·6 days agoPersonally, basically no one I know uses the app stores on windows or macos much. These app stores are actually functional in that they have proprietary apps and allow purchases. There is basically 0 chance Linux will become popular if you can only install things through an app store (especially those that make it hard/impossible to buy proprietary apps). Additionally, desktop Linux is not particularly secure anyway. Flatpaks are helpful here, but most require manual tuning of their sandbox to actually be secure, which the average user is 100% not gonna do. On top of this, what do you do when an app is not available in your curated app store? Do you download it directly online? Do you trust some random repository you find online that can be filled with who knows what at a later point? Or do you just say “oh well sucks to be you I guess?” If you download it directly online, then it may not even have dependency information. If it doesn’t embed dependency information, then it’s basically useless to your average person. It also has the problem you mentioned of someone downloading the wrong executable. Likewise, the other two options are IMO just not viable.
IMO, the only way for a package manager/app store solution to work is:
- The platform is built around it from day 1
- The platform has a large number of developers submitting their packages to it (as opposed to the distro maintainers having to track down changes themselves)
- The app store has payment methods
- The app store has proprietary apps
- The app store has a large number of reviewers that can check the apps submitted in a timely manner
- Probably bundling dependencies with the apps.
- The app store has a functional review system with users actually leaving reviews.
- Going along with the reviews, going through the app store (as opposed to using the package manager directly) may need to be a requirement to encourage reviews, at least at first.
Basically, it needs to be an iOS/Android situation, with a similarly large company backing it. I should also note that it’s possible to install malware on iOS/Android, just harder, and the scope is usually less severe because of sandboxing.
EDIT: Also, it’s entirely possible to do one-click installs in a “safe” way, by requiring that developers get their apps signed by whoever makes the distro (like macos gatekeeper or whatever it’s called).
EDIT 2: I should also note that just being “different” is enough for people not to use something. If something basic, like the way to install apps, is different enough, people may just decide they don’t like it. My relatives would likely do this, for instance.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@lemmy.ml•What problems does Linux have to overcome to get more usersEnglish52·6 days ago- Needs to come pre-installed on computers.
- Pre-installed distro needs to support one-click installation (like .app or .exe).
- Pre-installed distro needs to have be easily searchable (for problems, and e.g. searching “chrome DISTRO_NAME” needs to pop up with a link to the one-click installer).
- Pre-installed distro needs to run perfectly out-of-the-box, no fiddling with drivers, no needing to issue a random shell command for some random issue.
- UI needs to be intuitive. Probably something like KDE. Could maybe do Elementary or GNOME with dash-to-dock or something.
- Updates should be easy. Ideally apps can self-update or the apps will indicate if they need an update and have a button opening up an updater that can update all your apps/the OS.
- Updates for minor programs need to be hidden/rolled into OS updates. Most people aren’t gonna want to see that glibc updated.
- Better management of stuff like VPNs (probably not important for the average user, but e.g. NetworkManager’s GUI support is kinda shit).
- If using GNOME, need to have app indicator stuff pre-installed (if I’m being honest, the fact it’s not built-in is absurd).
- Needs to come with good basic apps. Some of the default apps included with DEs are kinda shit. There is still no truly good mail client IMO (at least that doesn’t look dated AF).
Probably more.
EDIT: Something like Lutris should probably be integrated into the OS. Installing non-Steam games is a minor hassle at the moment IMO.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Google Gemini struggles to write code, calls itself “a disgrace to my species”English16·6 days agoI can’t wait for the AI future.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK about Changing your Profile Picture to ClippyEnglish4·6 days agoI’m ngl this looks somewhat useful minus the copilot crap. Having lists and headers and so on are useful for actually taking notes.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto News@lemmy.world•CNBC Transcript: President of the United States Donald Trump Speaks with CNBC’s “Squawk Box” TodayEnglish14·7 days agoI still don’t fucking understand how people voted for someone who sounds they’re having a stroke 24/7.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump says he plans to put a 100% tariff on computer chips, likely pushing up cost of electronicsEnglish3·8 days agoMy dude, the chips aren’t manufactured in the US. If the tariffs don’t apply to the chips that are inherently imported from outside the US since basically only TSMC and Samsung make them at this point, then there is no tariff at all. Companies in the US import the chips, then use the imported chips as part of their products. All the companies in the US do is assemble the imported parts (and sometimes not even that).
EDIT: Ah, there was a miscommunication. I think we’re both saying the same thing at this point. Well, mostly the same, since this doesn’t really help US companies and just drives up prices for everything.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Leopards Ate My Face@lemmy.world•Gen Z men voted for Trump to drain 'the swamp.' After Epstein, they feel duped.English53·8 days agoI mean up until recently they were all like, “haha just wait until the list comes out and all you libtards get yours.” Of course, now that trump has made it abundantly clear he’s on it (as opposed to it just being normally clear he was on it before), they’ve split into gullible idiots who feel betrayed and cultish idiots who now think pedophilia is actually not so bad somehow.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump says he plans to put a 100% tariff on computer chips, likely pushing up cost of electronicsEnglish31·8 days agoI’m convinced you’re a troll/bot. That is not in fact how tariffs work since the chips are not made in the US.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@programming.dev•Why I'm Leaving NixOS After a Year? (Uğur Erdem Seyfi)English4·8 days agoI’m building multiple patchsets on a laptop. How tf do you expect millions of lines of even somewhat optimized code to compile in a minute or two? The configuration by itself wastes like half of that, not to mention nix taking 2 minutes to evaluate because specializations are slow af. It in fact takes more like 2-3 hours for them to finish.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump says he plans to put a 100% tariff on computer chips, likely pushing up cost of electronicsEnglish3·8 days agoLooking into it, the US implementation goes down into the components, so yes. Except, I believe it’d be $50 chip @ 100%, other components at whatever tariff rates they may have, and then the 15% per-country/region tariff applies to all of it on top. So if the other components have no tariffs, it’d be $172.50. I’m now wondering how expensive everything would end up if you have tariffs on materials as well.
In any case though, it becomes ludicrously expensive no matter what because you’re at most dodging the 15%.
EDIT: You can also dodge some of the tariffs if some percentage of the product is made in the US. I wonder if you’d be able to dodge the chip tariff if the materials for it were partially sourced from the US. If possible, that’d probably be cheaper for companies than actually trying to manufacture chips here.
EDIT 2: Actually your calculation may be right, I’m having a hard time finding how they’re actually meant to be calculated. Admittedly it seems a bit weird to me that the rate would override the country-specific rate and thus be the same for chips from the EU and China, but I suppose none of this makes sense in the first place.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump says he plans to put a 100% tariff on computer chips, likely pushing up cost of electronicsEnglish101·8 days agoPretty sure that’s their point. Say a product costs $100 dollars with no tariffs. If you import the product from the EU with a 15% tariff, it’s now $115 with tariffs (assuming no tariffs importing the chips into the EU). If you manufacture the product in the US, you need to pay 100% tariffs for all the chips. Obviously the impact depends on how much the chips cost relative to the entire product, but if the chips are half the cost ($50), then with a 100% tariff you’re now paying $150 for the product manufactured in the US.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto World News@lemmy.world•US reportedly forcing TSMC to buy 49% stake in Intel to secure tariff relief for TaiwanEnglish8·9 days agoLol they want $400 billion in investment in the US too. However, aside from that, I sort of wonder how buying Intel would work out for TSMC. They’d basically be buying a research wing + existing US foundries. The most important thing for them would probably be ensuring that the foundries and so on in Taiwan are the most advanced to avoid the US ditching them if the PRC decides to invade.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GameVault - The Identity UpdateEnglish3·10 days agoI’ve never used them, but if you want streaming, you can use Moonlight/Sunshine. It’d be very cool if a project integrated everything together, so you could choose whether to download the games or stream them from the server.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@programming.dev•Why I'm Leaving NixOS After a Year? (Uğur Erdem Seyfi)English10·10 days agoI’m planning to, I’m waiting for the kernel to finish building rn lol
EDIT: PR got merged BTW (https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/431115).
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@programming.dev•Why I'm Leaving NixOS After a Year? (Uğur Erdem Seyfi)English7·10 days agoYou’re supposed to be able to use
lib.kernel.unset
to unset them. In any case, that’s just one problem. The main issue is the entire option is ignored because of a typo in nixpkgs.
arcterus@piefed.blahaj.zoneto Linux@programming.dev•Why I'm Leaving NixOS After a Year? (Uğur Erdem Seyfi)English21·10 days agoI’m gonna be honest, I use NixOS, but the docs fucking suck, and a number of things are just broken in nixpkgs. For instance, I recently discovered the
structuredExtraConfig
option for patching the kernel straight up does not work. This means you cannot unset any kernel options, which means some kernel patches won’t work unless you manually supply the entire kernel config.EDIT: what’s even more annoying about it not working is that it fails to apply silently. In other words, your kernel tries to compile and then an hour later it fails because your config changes weren’t applied.
The constant kernel drama is honestly kind of frustrating.