There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

kbin.life

zewm , to linux in Why is Fedora called Fedora?

Red hat’s logo is a red fedora. It’s not that deep.

rtxn , to piracy in Switched from uTorrent to QBitTorrent

uTorrent has been down the shitter for over a decade now, I wouldn’t be surprised if the download speed was throttled without a pro subscription. It could also be a difference in how the applications discover seeds, or how much CPU time or memory is allocated to downloads.

As a general rule, if an application is full of anti-features, it tends to have better, usually FOSS, alternatives.

nudnyekscentryk ,
@nudnyekscentryk@szmer.info avatar

And alternativeto.net is the place to find them alternatives

radix , to nostupidquestions in If Trump and Biden both died today, what would happen?
@radix@lemmy.world avatar

Kamala Harris becomes President, and the GOP implodes under the weight of a million conspiracy theories.

meco03211 ,

Don’t forget the infighting. I imagine it would be glorious. Like watching the inbred redneck family having an all out brawl at Walmart.

sab ,

And then comes the conspiracy theories. Which will happen if either of them die any time soon anyway. Because what are the odds of old men randomly dying, right? There must be a conspiracy!

Trump having a heart attack before the election would provide enough conspiracy theories for a lifetime, and it honestly seems about as likely as him not having a heart attack.

meco03211 ,

I’d love to hit a few qultists I know with the “dIeD sUdDeNlY!!” bullshit they spew if trump died before the election.

Rhaedas ,
@Rhaedas@kbin.social avatar

Well, it would be pretty suspicious given he's the world's healthiest man. /s

Riccosuave ,
@Riccosuave@lemmy.world avatar

Hey man, don’t bring Lauren Boebert’s family into this!!!

PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S , to asklemmy in Are you not annoyed by Lemmy's constant glitches?
@PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I have wildly more patience for Lemmy’s glitches than I do for Reddit’s. Lemmy’s devs are working on a shoestring budget with just a few people trying to prop up a whole social network. The project is still pretty early in its life cycle.

Lmaydev ,

A lot of the mentioned issues are caused by instances having different versions.

This could be fixed with API versioning. As in you support the last couple versions of the API rather than only the new one.

pixelscript ,

I believe this most recent update to v0.19 was somewhat unique in the regard of login incompatibility across versions, as major breaking changes to authentication itself were the focus of it.

Sticker OP ,

Since your reply to the post for xarexyouxmadx is not visible from this instance, I will reply here.

We at SDF had some outgoing federation issues recently, and we weren’t the only ones.

Has this problem gone unresolved for a long time?
Right now, a similar issue with the instance lemmy.today

Also, my original instance (vlemmy) literally deleted itself in July.

The first instance I was registered on doesn’t exist anymore either. It was celeb.pizza

magnetosphere , (edited )
@magnetosphere@kbin.social avatar

Exactly. Those people are paid salaries. They have teams working on things. When something is allowed to go wrong, someone either didn’t do the job they’re paid for, or they’re incompetent/apathetic. They’re using proven software that’s been around a while.

When there’s a problem with a Lemmy instance, then maybe the one person responsible was at the job that actually pays their rent. They’re working with beta software that’s full of “surprises”.

yamanii , to games in What's up with Epic Games?
@yamanii@lemmy.world avatar

Epic’s CEO has a hateboner for everything Linux.

qevlarr , to asklemmy in "If you tell a lie big enough and tell it frequently enough, people will eventually come to believe it". What is an example of this happening today?
@qevlarr@lemmy.world avatar
  • gestures broadly at US politics *
aredditimmigrant , to technology in What DID Apple innovate?

There’s an old saying in computing. “you improve usability by taking away options and features” apple didn’t necessarily invent this mindset. But they perfected it.

They took BSD, a security focused, but not very user friendly, offshoot of Linux/unix and made it “popular” by adding several layers of polish and doing a lot of the configuration work for you and made it osx. This was a time when Linux usability/management on the personal/newbie scale was garbage. If you wanted to install a certain distro of *nix, you better make sure you have supporting hardware and the right up to date tutorial, which is managed by an unknown volunteer, which was usually some person bored on the weekend a few months ago and never updated, they’ve made *nix installation and management a lot better though recently.

They also did this with music. People used to have large collections of unorganized mp3s in the early 00s, unless you were really anal and had a lot of time in your hands, because you were likely downloading them from several different illegal places, and legally buying mp3s were all over the place. You could buy the album off this weird obscure website that you didn’t want to trust with your CC information, because there were a lot of mom and pop music stores online. Then apple brought out iTunes and allowed both buying and managing (and eventually upgrading, traveling around with) music to be dead simple.

For smartphones, they stole a LOT from BlackBerry, but they took it to the next level. Blackberry had email, a private messaging network, and mobile web scrolling waayyyy before anyone. And so many people loved it so much that even Obama famously didn’t want to give his up when he took office. Then apple came out with the iPhone, and blew it away with a bigger screen and again, a lot more polish.

Innovation happens in small steps over years. Apple didn’t invent mobile phones, smart phones, tablets, or computing, they didn’t invent security, encrypted audio/video calls, or music management. They’ve done a lot of crappy stuff, and they charge super high amounts of money for less than state of the art hardware. Their innovation could be summed up by this profound statement I remember a friend said to me once around 2003/4.

“Osx, because making Linux pretty was easier than fixing Windows”

batmaniam ,

Also standardizing hardware. Part of the iPhones success was that developers had to develop for A phone, singular. There were a lot of cool palm programs and whatnot, but having a single hardware set to bug-smash had to be a big part of making the app-market go into hyper drive.

I don’t own a single apple product, but credit where credit is due.

GeniusIsme ,

Ahh, no. The window where existed only one iPhone and you could develop for it was very narrow. And then you need not only develop for different hardware, but software as well. Yes, different versions of iOS are different. Source: developers for mobile for three years.

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Isn’t the problem now just different screen sizes? I thought that, other than that, everything is easily portable from between different iphones, ipads and whatnot

GeniusIsme ,

Screen sizes, presence and size of notches, and available APIs between OS versions.

CoggyMcFee ,

And the iPhone screen size didn’t change until the App Store had been around for 4 years, during which time it became huge. I am not sure why this person is trying to discount what you’re saying.

aredditimmigrant ,

Not only for iPhone, but for Mac as well. It’s easy to install bsd on a machine when you have access to the best hw engineers and documenters on the planet.

kernelle ,

Perfect description, they made very complex functionality accessible by the general public.

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Steve Jobs in particular was extremely anal in removing whatever he deemed “not needed”. The first mac nearly didn’t have arrow keys for its keyboard. He hated the function keys of keyboards so much he once personally removed the keys from a person who asked for an autograph

aredditimmigrant ,

Thank you, exactly

drev ,

Came here to say something similar about touchscreens on phones. It’s probably the most impactful innovation they’ve had, and ever will have imo. I can’t ethically support Apple as a company and I haven’t owned an apple product since the first iPod touch, but they absolutely deserve credit for this one.

Even if they didn’t invent the touch screen, or even the touchscreen phone, they certainly figured out how to perfectly integrate touchscreens into mobile devices a fluid and intuitive user interface which served as a canvas on which to build pretty much anything you wanted in the form of a mobile app (a $200B+ industry which the iPhone absolutely catalysed the explosive growth of).

It arguably even began a significant change in the course of modern human interaction, due to how much more versatile and therefore more commonly used mobile phones with a similar UI basis became since then; because of that, increasingly popular social media platforms now had a new way to provide use for their platform (via mobile apps) on a device that pretty much everyone now had with them all the time. I don’t think it’s coincidence that social media use saw such substantially explosive growth soon after the iPhone and subsequent “copycats” were on the market.

So their innovation here was really the first step in a number of global paradigm shifts. It was just such a monumentally impactful step forward. Because of this I genuinely think that the iPhone is almost guaranteed to be in history books for centuries, like the printing press or the light bulb.

IphtashuFitz ,

They’ve also excelled at seamless integration across devices. I can start an iMessage conversation on my iPhone, switch to my laptop for a while, then to my iPad.

Same thing with phone calls. If my phone is on the other side of the house and starts ringing, then both my laptop and iPad ring as well. I can grab whichever device is closest and answer the call on it.

aredditimmigrant ,

Seamless integration has been around since the first real-time chatrooms though. Again, just making a better UI

For phone calls that’s just VoIP which was around waaaaayyy before the iPhone, Skype was doing something similar in the consumer geek market in 2004/5. They just brought it to the big consumer market, and again, made it 1000x easier to do.

AlijahTheMediocre ,

This is something that can easily be done on Windows and Linux also, its just not an out of the box setup like Mac

ferralcat ,

It’s pretty out of the box now with windows and android. You have to link the two but then it just works (I don’t find it a useful feature though)

ferralcat ,

Apple purchased their touch screen division from people who had been working on touchscreens for decades before them.

drev ,

Are you saying that other people had been working on and creating what became Apple’s mobile phone touchscreen interface, and they just bought the already near-finished product? If that’s the case I wasn’t aware.

Or if you’re trying to correct me (I assume you’re not, but you never know), I did acknowledge that Apple didn’t invent the touch screen or touch screen phone, the tech has been around since the 1960’s and even on phones since the early 90’s iirc.

mo_ztt ,
@mo_ztt@lemmy.world avatar

Lots of things like pinch-to-zoom, auto-switching the phone from portrait to landscape mode depending on how it was rotated, basically the actually-usable-as-a-browser features that are part of every modern touchscreen, were originally popularized by Apple. They were the first to make a touchscreen UI that rivaled a desktop computer instead of a pretty substandard WAP interface.

someguy3 ,

You’re giving way too much to Apple. The important part of the touchscreen was cost. It wasn’t viable as common tech until the cost came down. Apple was just riding that curve down and decided when to make a product.

drev ,

Sure, cost was almost certainly taken into account, they are a business after all.

But they didn’t just get lucky by gambling touch screens and waiting to become cheap enough. Take a look at the user interface of the touchscreen phones that came before the iPhone. Very limited in what they could do. Users were locked to a few small menus and custom-tailored applets, not much different than the UI of the phones before the iPhone. A touch screen was really more of a tech gimmick than a feature. Most (if not all) only accepted single stationary taps, any movement with a finger pressed to the screen wouldn’t register properly, if at all, and there’s really only so much you can do with that.

What Apple innovated is a better use for touch screens, an improvement in the way we were able to interact with our phones, coupled with a re-imagining of what a phone’s interface should be at a fundamental level. And they accomplished this with huge help from their decision to move away from tap-only touch to something that felt more natural: multiple/moving gestures, such as scrolling by moving your finger up or down, pinch to zoom, etc.

This really caused the single biggest movement away from what cell phones really were for us. Before, they were mostly portable telephones with a few extra poorly-implemented and barely functional gimmicks (ever use a web browser on a Razr?). With the iPhone’s success, Apple single-handedly shifted us into the new cell phone model; a customisable, intuitive to use, modular canvas that anyone can mould into whatever suits their needs via apps created by anyone (which Apple gets huge credit for yet again, because this could only he possible with the developer kits Apple released, effectively outsourcing creative solutions in taking advantage of the iPhone’s functionality).

When you look at what they set out to innovate, how they went about doing it, how much different it was than phones in the past, and how incredibly similar it is to phones today, a whole 15 years later, you just cannot reasonably deny that it was an extremely innovative and influential product.

someguy3 , (edited )

I agree they didn’t “get lucky”, they timed their device to the costs that were outside of their control. This is a common theme in venture capital: timing. You have to time your entry correctly. Too early and it’s too expensive, too late and someone else did it and maybe took the market.

After that I think we have different ideas of what innovation is. To me innovation is inventing. Something new. Blackberry was the innovative device. They were the first (common) smartphone. Touch screens existed in various places (some things released, some not), apple didn’t innovate that. Yes even the pinch to zoom existed on some smart table thing. Scrolling? Pretty sure that was old fry. Touch screen on phones? Pretty sure Nokia had that. So what did apple do? What apple does well is refine. They took existing idea/invention of a smartphone, they took the existing tech/invention of a touchscreen, they timed it, and put out the a touch phone. This was possible because costs of touchscreens came down. The march of technology did not depend on apple.

drev ,

I’ll argue that the blackberry was just a better implementation of the already existing PDA exactly like the iPhone was just a better implementation of already existing touch-screen device, but beyond that I just don’t feel like taking time to repeat/clarify points I’ve already made or responding to "pretty sure"s. So I’ll just suggest we agree to disagree on this particular topic and wish you a merry Christmas 🎅

someguy3 ,

Lol when you start mocking someone you show who you actually are. Speaks louder than anything you actually say.

drev ,

I’m absolutely not mocking you.

You’re basing some of your arguments on things you don’t seem to actually know, and using incorrect interpretations of my words as basis for some of your counter-points. I’ve noticed a pattern in people who formulate and present arguments/points similar to the way you do, and they tend to be difficult to hold civil discussions with, so I chose to end our discussion.

I’m sorry if that comes off as harsh or rude, but it’s my honest reason for ending our discussion. There’s truly no malice or mockery behind my words

Anyway, this is my last message to you. And since you seem to have read my previous message as a passive aggressive mockery, I really do genuinely hope you have a great holiday season.

someguy3 ,

You were absolutely mocking. 100%. And you continue! (with even more apparent attacks). Anyway when you mock people I have no desire to converse with you. Cheers.

dpkonofa ,

For clarity, BlackBerry devices still loaded “mobile” websites, aka “WAP” sites. The iPhone’s innovation was figuring out a way to allow browsing of full, normal web pages. By displaying the full page and using the touchscreen features to zoom in and out, it made every page out there almost instantly usable on mobile.

hansl ,

Also they basically invented software keyboards. People didn’t think you could have an efficient software keyboard, even the android prototypes still had a physical keyboard for typing.

dpkonofa ,

Yup. Google developers had to go back to the drawing board for both the hardware and the OS after the iPhone announcement.

Jikiya ,

I still miss having a physical keyboard for messages. If HTC had kept making slide out keyboard phones, I woulda kept buying. Though it seems, based on market trends, I might have been one of the very few.

chitak166 ,

I don’t even think making Linux pretty is that hard.

You just have to cut out all the retards who think average people want to use a terminal. Once you start thinking pragmatically, practical solutions come to mind.

Lots of insecure people like to overcomplicate things they don’t understand to cover up their lack of knowledge rather than just admitting they don’t know.

skeezix ,

Was bsd an offshoot of linux? I thought it was the other way around. Honest question.

Kethal ,

BSD and Linux are offshoots of Unix.

aredditimmigrant ,

Yeah … I wasn’t sure when I wrote it and didn’t think it’d matter tbh

Kethal ,

I thought about making a comment and decided it didn’t matter, but skeezix gave me the opportunity to do it indirectly.

ada , to asklemmy in If you don't have coding skills, why don't you help foss software by making it more user friendly instead?
@ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Using GitHub is a skill of it’s own, and requires knowledge of coding practices. It’s hugely confronting to someone without coding experience

haui_lemmy OP ,

Yes, absolutely but github (which is only an example, mind you) has a lot of consumer friendly accomodations like github gui and cli.

You can edit stuff directly in someone elses repo (or so it seems) in the web browser. I know you have to do a branch and a pull request but thats something that can be worked on.

frosty99c ,
haui_lemmy OP ,

Thanks for making my point. :)

jnplch ,

Woooooooooooosh

haui_lemmy OP ,

Wow. Great addition. Have a nice day.

pineapplelover ,

The “woosh” is because we’re trying to point out that the average person probably doesn’t know how to use git cli and make coding documentation.

haui_lemmy OP ,

I knew that. I‘m saying just because the average person doesnt use it does not mean nobody uses it.

567PrimeMover ,
@567PrimeMover@kbin.social avatar

Having worked IT helpdesk, people need their hand held through a gui control panel much less a cli. There's a good 30% of people out there who have no idea what the Start Menu is until you tell them "the little windows icon in the lower left-hand corner of your screen." You start throwing github mumbo jumbo at them their brains will melt. I'm not saying these people are stupid, that's just how things are. For most people, computers work until they don't and they don't really care about your github repo or your mailing lists

Paradachshund ,

Since you’re trying to build bridges with this post, I just want you to know that everything you mentioned in this comment is far beyond a non-programmer and sounds totally incomprehensible. It’s jargon soup. I don’t say this to dunk on you or anything, I just wanted to let you know how high your own skill level is, because it can be easy to forget sometimes. People without those skills won’t be able to follow this kind of explanation.

frosty99c ,

That was exactly my point with the linked xkcd too. Not sure how he interpreted that as being in support of his post.

haui_lemmy OP ,

Thanks for the heads up. Yes, I‘m indeed trying to help and apparently some people really want me to stop but I wont. I‘m happy a few actually appreciate it.

The jargon soup is not intentional, I was trying to head off a couple smartypants that will tell me that editing a repository in the browser actually just makes a branch.

You can’t do it right anyway. If you facilitate change, people will crucify you. So I just take hate and dont care at all.

FlickOfTheBean ,

I’m interested in where the limits to expectations lie here. I’m not trying to be a jerk when I say this next part but I do worry I may come off that way but I’m trying to figure out the boundaries of what a “reasonable” expectation is so I can make tasks like this easier for my own team (completely unrelated to this project but it’s essentially the same problem).

Is it not reasonable to expect people to type into a search engine something like “GitHub help” and then poke around in the links that come up?

… Well I’ll be damned, I tried my own method before commenting, and the first link that comes up is a red herring, how obnoxious. I was hoping it’d be a link to the docs, not GitHub support. I guess I just answered my own question: no that is not reasonable.

As a technical user, I am still at a loss for how to help a non-technical user in an algorithmic way that will work for most non-technical users x.x guess I’ll be thinking about this problem some more lol

(I guess I’m rambling but I’m gonna post this anyways in case anyone wants to chatter about it with me)

Paradachshund ,

It’s super hard to know this and there won’t be a consistent answer because everyone is different. You have to meet people where they are.

I think you did answer your own question on this one. I’ll also say that as a somewhat technical user but still not a heavily technical user like some people here, GitHub is a really baffling website. It’s hard to even figure out how to download something from it. I would strongly encourage anyone who wants to reach non-technical users to avoid GitHub. It’s made for programmers and it doesn’t make sense to anyone else without training.

FlickOfTheBean ,

That’s fair. Part of my job is converting non-technical users into technical users by teaching them things like problem solving approaches that are supposed to help them teach themselves how to learn whatever they need to actually do their job. I don’t teach them what to do, I teach them how to learn what to do.

I agree that you gotta meet people where they’re at, but I try to teach them how to poke around any code repo site, like GitHub or gitlab, so they can use it. Usually I point them to the docs and start by pointing out my favorite parts so that they have somewhere to kind of start by themselves, but it is a skill set that can be practice, or at least I am convinced it is.

I’m not very good at this part of my job, but also, no one is, so it’s not a bad thing, I just want to do better. I guess I never thought of it from a truly non-technical and not wanting to be technical perspective before. This could be solved by a secondary interface designed specifically for this kind of user. It would not allow code download or interaction, but it would allow for issue logging. I might put this idea in my ever growing project list because it sounds like it would be a useful product…

agent_flounder ,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

I code but I found it to have quite a learning curve.

Maybe the first step is to develop a “how to use git for improving documentation on a FOSS project” lol

FIST_FILLET , to nostupidquestions in Does anyone else feel like 90% of the population is stupid?

this is the most reddit post i’ve seen on lemmy

Why9 , to games in The Game Awards 2023: List of Winners

It honestly made my night to see Neil Newbon win the best performance for Baldurs Gate 3. With him talking about how he pretty much gave up on acting and went through some pretty rough times and discrimination before getting into voice acting, it’s amazing to see him finally be seen.

And let’s be clear, he wasn’t just a voice actor in BG3! He had to mocap as well as read his lines. His likeness was captured in Astarion perfectly. He was a full actor here and did an incredible job. Best performance was well deserved.

Oatsinator ,

Ben Starr was my personal pick, as he poured his everything into the role and has continued to do so on social media. He’s so incredibly proud to represent such a character. All of the nominated performances this year were spectacular and it was a very hard choice

iheartneopets ,

I just wish they have the man enough time to give a proper speech!! He was barely half a minute through his thank yous before they were shooing him off stage. It was so disrespectful. Let him have his moment, this is a huge deal. It’s not like he was rambling on.

All that just to make room for more fortnite ads. Disgraceful.

thedirtyknapkin ,

i mean, least year they had the opposite problem. this was likely just over-compensation

iheartneopets ,

I hope you’re right.

bob_lemon ,

I didn’t know who he is out which character he voiced, but my immediate thought upon reading was “he’s gotta be Astarion”. Phenomenal performance.

TheButtonJustSpins , to asklemmy in What is the weirdest thing you were under an NDA for?

I couldn’t say.

Sabata11792 , to fediverse in Why do a lot of fediverse instances put their software (i.e. Lemmy/Mastodon) in their name somehow?
@Sabata11792@kbin.social avatar

All creativity leaves your body as you are buying a domain.

Oha ,

can confirm

DarkThoughts ,

Also me during character creation in video games.

Sabata11792 ,
@Sabata11792@kbin.social avatar

Yep, default with a cool face scar, or wiafu.

DarkThoughts ,

Nah, I can spent ages inside of it if there's a good editor, but I will equally spent a long ass time sitting in front of the text box for the name. Especially if they require a last name as well.

PlexSheep ,
@PlexSheep@feddit.de avatar

Can confirm, I have my name and a pretty much random domain name.

TheHolyChecksum , to asklemmy in Why are people censoring "bad" words?

Comes from the social media platforms that auto remove stories that contain certain words. Tiktok, Instagram, etc.

Dasnap ,
@Dasnap@lemmy.world avatar

Cool, all the platforms I don’t use anyway.

Think I just don’t like places that are squeaky clean.

Techphilia ,

TikTok and Instagram are squeaky clean?

joyjoy , to mildlyinfuriating in Adobe tells you to use Chrome, not Firefox

It’s because they’re using a chrome only API to interact with USB devices. This used to be a dedicated piece of software. I guess they don’t even want to provide an electron app.

friend_of_satan , (edited )

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • phx ,

    Honestly, I kinda hate the idea of a browser being able to access hardware devices.

    ultratiem , (edited )
    @ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

    That’s why no one outside Google wants it. Apple said no. Firefox said no. There’s a reason. WebRTC is shit. It leaks too much just for a small convenience.

    And yeah, browsers don’t need my USB ports thanks.

    This move was what hurt VIA as they moved to the API exclusively. So the only native apps are just electron wrappers 🤷‍♂️

    Edit: Looks like Mozilla said yes after all heavy sigh: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/…/WebUSB_API

    MonkderZweite ,

    At the end we have Flash + ActiveX alltogether again.

    ilinamorato ,

    WebRTC and WebUSB are different things. RTC doesn’t provide direct port access, afaik.

    ultratiem ,
    @ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

    I know. Both have the same fundamental premise: to leak data that shouldn’t be leaked.

    “WebUSB provides a way for these non-standardized USB device services to be exposed to the web. This means that hardware manufacturers will be able to provide a way for their device to be accessed from the web, without having to provide their own API.”

    That’s from Mozilla. And that’s a hard pass. Why anyone wants this is beyond me. Just so long as there’s a flag to turn it off.

    ilinamorato ,

    Have you worked with either before? They’re completely unrelated technologies, with similar names. They have nothing to do with one another. They’re not even being developed by the same groups. They emphatically do not have the same fundamental premise. I’ve built apps in WebRTC before, and I can guarantee it has nothing to do with WebUSB, and in fact I just confirmed in the docs that it has nothing to do with any sort of device-level hardware control.

    To reiterate: the only connection between WebUSB and WebRTC is the fact that they’re named “Web” + three letter initialism.

    ultratiem ,
    @ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

    Wikipedia is pretty aggressive with these bots

    ilinamorato ,

    I have absolutely no idea what that’s intended to mean.

    ultratiem ,
    @ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

    Bots never do.

    ilinamorato ,

    Oh cool, ad hominem. The clearest and most humble concession of defeat. Very well, I accept your capitulation.

    ultratiem ,
    @ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

    Only losers claim victory in such ways

    ilinamorato ,

    I have no need to claim it when you so freely offer it.

    TuEstUnePommeDeTerre , (edited )

    That’s their web dev documentation. The official position is no.

    infeeeee ,

    Is this an app for recording and editing podcasts? Why do they need usb access for that? On its website it doesn’t says anything about usb.

    bigmclargehuge ,
    @bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

    Microphones, webcams, capture cards, etc

    Still ,
    @Still@programming.dev avatar

    those do not require access to the underlying devices to get tho

    MonkderZweite ,

    What do they need that for? Every bowser has a file picker/dragndop.

    joyjoy ,

    I see it as them interacting directly with microphones, webcams, and other peripherals.

    MonkderZweite ,

    Every browser manages that too, though.

    ColeSloth , to asklemmy in What is the worst thing someone in the Simpson family ever did?

    Bart ruined all of Australia with that frog

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines