[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 6 points 5 months ago

I have mixed feelings about this.

We as the west point to Russia and China frequently, lamenting the closed-off nature of their Internet.

Now we are publicly pushing towards further fragmentation of the Internet.

I find it hard to see major differences between blocking TikTok here and China blocking Facebook over there. I assume, the process here is a little more publicly discussed whereas in Russia or China, things are quietly blocked by government agencies, but I might even be wrong about that.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 2 points 9 months ago

Ah, interesting. Well, if you create a bug report, post the link here and I'll vote it up for visibility :)

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 8 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I believe it's because firefox's UI is placed on the bottom of the screen per default. To account for that, I believe they adjust the viewport's height to either exclude the bottom of the screen (when the symbol bar is displayed) or include it (when you scroll down and the symbol bar is hidden).

Because they use a slide-out animation based on scrolling within the web page, the viewport changes a million times in height and causes elements fixed to the bottom of the viewport to jump and adjust a lot, causing weird behavior. And nobody tests for that.

All of thse are my assumptions by the way, please test for yourself, I might well be wrong.

If it really bothers you, try placing the symbol bar above and see if it works. It's in the settings.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 9 points 9 months ago

What exactly are you criticizing about linux? That it got (too) successful? That it is run in its current form by Linus Torvalds at the top as a sort of benevolent dictator? That it is taking money from sponsors?

Genuinely curious, this is a first time I've seen such criticism. More often I see linux people in endless flamewars about DEs, wayland vs X, package managers or whatever they feel strongly about and I'm not interested in those.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 2 points 11 months ago

Thanks for the reminder. I've been wanting to try it out.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 11 points 11 months ago

I've seen the same. I wonder if the older you get, the more you value your time.

I remember seeing lots of ad breaks on TV when I was a kid and it didn't stop me from watching a show. Now if an ad break happens, I am reminded why I don't own a TV and turn it off.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I am sure other platforms / personal hosting will continue to exist in the future. They simply won't be relevant in terms of video streaming market share.

The network effect of youtube is massive. They have a huge amount of content creators and audience. That means the audience will stick around for the creators and the creators go for the biggest audience and hence the most views.

Being google, they have data centers all over the globe, provide a fast app / browser access for any OS, can cast to a TV with one click - all these equal convenience which cannot easily be beat by any individual website.

Some huge youtube brands like linus media group are trying with floatplane as their own paid video hosting service, but I'm sure their view numbers are insignificant compared to youtube even though they are the biggest players.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 32 points 11 months ago

I doubt it, unfortunately.

Like many other online services they've saturated the market so the only way to increase profits is to extract more money from individual users.

They are also a quasi-monopoly for a reason - hosting and streaming video is resource-intensive, so I wouldn't hold my breath for a free alternative that would scale. AFAIK, piped and such are only frontends to youtube which will be killed off by ToS or through technical means.

Maybe there are free video sites that also host their videos, but as I said, since it quickly becomes very expensive, I don't see anyone being able to do that for free for long.

Unfortunately, if anyone is going to "disrupt" youtube, it is going to come from a silicon valley startup and like youtube they will only burn investor capital for a limited time - until they have saturated the market (or failed). Then they'll have to monetize as well.

My only hope is something like a torrent approach where everyone who streams also hosts. But since that is technically difficult to perfect, needs a huge user base to succeed while not promising any commercial gain for the initiating party, nobody will throw a ton of money at the problem, so I wouldn't hold my breath.

My prediction is that people will either pay for premium or see ads in the mid- to long-term.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 1 points 11 months ago

If you set up bumblebee correctly you should be able to enable and disable the dedicated gpu on the fly if i'm not mistaken. Might still help with long teams meetings.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 1 points 11 months ago

I remember having bad overheating issues with Linux years ago on an XPS 15 (9560 model if memory serves, so unlike yours no 4k or touch).

The key on mine was to disable the dedicated GPU which I didn't need anyway. I remember afterwards, mint would run mostly quiet and the battery lasted longer than on the windows partition. If you are interested look up bumblebee on the arch wiki.

Also I know this reply is late, but maybe it helps.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de -1 points 11 months ago

You picked a single sentence in my reply and ignored the rest.

I'd suggest you go use OpenOffice then. Using an essentially 10yr old version of an inherently collaborative software will be a nightmare.

[-] zipfelwurster@feddit.de 2 points 11 months ago

This is a good suggestion.

I'd like to emphasize that a quiet grinder really is worth a little premium. I have a eureka mignon crono and that thing likes to scream with its lack of sound proofing.

When using a friend's mignon silenzio I was surprised by how much nicer it felt to be able to make a quiet cup in the morning.

Long story short, I'm now looking into applying sound proofing to my grinder and I wish I'd just spent a little more to get a much better experience out of the box.

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zipfelwurster

joined 1 year ago