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lemmy.ml

CosmicSploogeDrizzle , to memes in C’mon, Do Something
@CosmicSploogeDrizzle@lemmy.world avatar

This is a comment. Engage with it.

explodified ,

Engaged

puzzle ,

Congrats! When’s the wedding?

HEXN3T , to memes in what could it mean?
@HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

They went to the weed room. To smoke weed. I should go too…

KISSmyOSFeddit ,

I’d rather smoke in the broom closet.

BCsven , to memes in Bangladesh, Ghana, and Mauritius celebrate their independence from the crown this month

It still amazes me that a country as tiny as the UK was this ambitious and powerful to expand like that. Like if any of those other countries banded together and were like Yeah, No, it’s not on mate. Their numbers would eclipse the UK. maybe somebody with mechanics of colonization can explain how the UK was “succesful” at this venture

FilterItOut ,

Look up the CCPgrey video about who holds the keys to the kingdom. Napoleon wasn’t necessarily being dismissive when he called England a nation of merchants. They were very good at organizing power structures in ways that benefited them.

pixeltree ,
@pixeltree@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I think the title of that video is “The Rules for Rulers”

BCsven ,

Thanks

1917isnow OP ,
@1917isnow@lemmy.ml avatar

It’s a long story, and my entry point into understanding the breakup of the British sterling system was history about post-WWI shift from colonial empires to Harry Truman “development” (really maldevelopment, the language used for capitalist NGO aid today is very similar to his inaugural address).

Long story short it involves merciless application of death and torture to enclose a region and keep costs down, as well as ruthless exploitation of civilians to try to crack guerillas, the Phoenix Program’s main innovation over what was implemented in the Congo and Malaysia was a proto-internet communications system,and a methodical operations system escalating above that to commando squads and air strikes. The philosophy of anti-colonial torture has only grown more severe and incorporated electrical wires, clinical psychology, and evasion of human rights organizations. Look up “The Five Techniques”.

This is in order to establish a top-down system where colonies do not trade with one another, but only interface with the rigged colonial economy. Wall st + world bank + imf system has just taken this to further extremes with Blackrock and Vanguard against 84% of the population of the world plus 90% of the population of the remaining 16% in global north countries. The currency system being used is less crude and there is also the technological dependency on the payment systems like Swift to consider.

BCsven ,

Thanks

TheBat ,
@TheBat@lemmy.world avatar

the British sterling system

Me: the British stealing system

uid0gid0 ,

No flag, no country. m.youtube.com/watch?v=UTduy7Qkvk8

udon , to linuxmemes in "But my friend runs a PinePhone as a daily driver"

I’m quite optimistic about a usable Linux phone in the near future, maybe 5 years from now or so. When smartphones were a new thing, it was really hard for open source projects without a major company backing them to keep up with all the new developments. Hence all the projects that died out. But innovation on smartphones has basically come to a halt these days. Sure, your phone can get a little bit faster and have round displays now, but nobody cares anymore. Nothing of all that is essential. So, give it some time, we’ll get there.

lemmeee ,

I’m optimistic about the apps and desktop environments. We have made huge progress. But the problem is the hardware support. It seems that there are very few ARM SoCs, which work well with the mainline Linux kernel. So PinePhone uses a 2010 SoC and PinePhone Pro a 2016 SoC. And after all that time and despite community’s efforts to upstream everything, the mainline support is still not complete and we still use custom kernels.

blog.mobian.org/posts/…/paperweight-dilemma/

kameecoding , to linuxmemes in "But my friend runs a PinePhone as a daily driver"

Linux people tend to forget, that people want something that just works, why I love Linux, I have a mac and later bought an Iphone, the UX difference of using and airpod pro with an Android phone and an Iphone is just miles apart, I can literally have it in my ears, click on a video on my mac and the sound transfers, then as I go out for a walk with my dog and start a podcast, the airpods switch back to my phone without any hassle.

Before that I would have to disconnect and reconnect bluetooth multiple times to switch between the android phone and the macbook.

Granted I maybe care a lot more about good UX than normal people, but good UX like that just makes me hard.

ILikeBoobies ,

I switched from Windows to Linux because it just works

eochaid , (edited ) to linux in Windows 11 vs Linux supported HW
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Enough with the fan wars. Let’s be perfectly honest for once. Windows, Linux, MacOS - they all suck. Sometimes in similar ways, sometimes in different ways. But they all suck.

Windows users - I get you, you use it because it sorta works 40%, of the time and sucks in the way you understand.

Linux users - I get you, you know all of the arcane incantations you need to quickly install, update, and troubleshoot your os in a terminal window. It works - once you apply your custom bash script that applies every change you need to get everything exactly how you like it. But again, it sucks in the way you understand.

MacOS users - well I don’t really get you. You know what you’ve done.

We deserve better than this, guys. We deserve an os that just works, is easy to use, easy to configure, doesn’t require an IT degree to use, and that we can recommend to our grandma without a second thought.

01189998819991197253 ,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

MacOS users - well I don’t really get you. You know what you’ve done.

I laughed hard on this one hahahahaha

MadMadBunny ,

What did we do?

01189998819991197253 ,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

I’m not sure, but the statement made me laugh.

Personally, I love that there are so many choices. And, while I don’t like Apple products, I’m glad the choice exists, so that people who do like them (like you) are able to enjoy them.

Oz_Collector ,

You know exactly what you did!

socsa ,

Macbooks just make really nice ssh terminals for accessing your Linux dev environment. Though these days there are decent options for Linux terminals with a similar form factor, they just don’t tend to be much cheaper.

Asymptote ,

I think that something like 20% of what’s keeping me using Mac is iTerm2’s integration with ‘tmux -CC‘

chomskysfave5 ,

It kinda felt like you were gonna break into song about the Year of the BSD Desktop for a second there!

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

macOS is BSD-based—so technically that’s been true for about 22 years

Beliriel ,

Originally but afaik they rewrote basically the whole OS over the years and nothing of the original BSD remains. That’s what I heard but I never verified.

gianni ,
@gianni@lemmy.ca avatar

Look into Darwin BSD and the Mach kernel. Still alive and kicking.

chomskysfave5 ,

It’s barely recognizable if you look at it as BSD. People like to say that ChromeOS is not “acktually” Linux, but MacOS is waaayyyyy further from BSD than ChromeOS is to Linux.

Boogeyman4325 ,

just works, is easy to use, easy to configure, doesn’t require an IT degree to use, and that we can recommend to our grandma

TempleOS satisfies all of these conditions

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Okay, this quote from the Wikipedia page made me laugh.

TempleOS received mostly “sympathetic” reviews. Tech journalist David Cassel opined that “programming websites tried to find the necessary patience and understanding to accommodate Davis”.

akippnn ,

But do they have a varying degrees of suck?

AlternActive ,

Havent had issues with my Windows PC in years. I dont have time to deal with linux stuff at this ppint in my life but used to play with it as a teen.

gamma ,
@gamma@programming.dev avatar

My Linux review: 10/10, would recommend, but would not install for someone and let them use it for the next 5 years.

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

I guarantee you’ve had “problems” but you’re so used to Windows now that you have the muscle memory to deal with it without thinking much about it.

Using all three in my household kinda highlighted for me how much I was just ignoring or working around the ugliness of Windows every single day.

AlternActive ,

Sure thing buddy. I’ll say it again: no issues at all in ages.

corsicanguppy ,

ReactOS is promising.

unwantedpamphlet ,
@unwantedpamphlet@mastodon.social avatar

@eochaid @OsrsNeedsF2P yeah… I’m sorry but that’s like saying all screwdrivers suck. If you don’t take the time to learn how to use a tool you will always have a negative experience using said tool. You are never going to find an advanced technology that’s been dumbed down to the point where you can’t break it.

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Except that there’s a ton of actual competition in the screwdriver market that has forced innovation and improved screwdriver functionality that it is essentially “solved”.

Even cheap screwdrivers are easy to use and will do the job, they just might break after a few years. Expensive screwdrivers add extra features and are built to a higher quality. You can absolutely look up reviews and find “the best” screwdriver.

You also don’t need to learn to use a screwdriver. They’re all built to be self explanatory. If they have advanced features that need explaining, they’ll include a manual that explains each feature at a high school reading level because that’s their target market.

Also, there is no locked in loyalty to screwdriver brands. If a brand releases a shit driver, they’ll get roasted. If a new contender puts out a screwdriver that’s better than the rest, tradespeople will flock to it.

I would love it for OSes to be treated like screwdrivers are.

monkey ,

Probably an unpopular opinion on here, but the OS I recommend for grandparents and parents is ChromeOS. It’s so locked down that it’s almost indestructible, and they almost never need any specialized software that you’d use Windows/MacOS for. If you’re savvy enough you can also use Linux on it in a container, which is how I prefer to use it for day to day stuff (in my case, data related workflows).

TurboDiesel ,
@TurboDiesel@lemmy.world avatar

Yep. I’m in IT, so every time my parents’ computer “does something weird,” I get a call. Bought them Chromebooks a few Christmases ago and the calls have all but stopped.

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

No that’s fair. It just assumes that everything you’ll ever need is on a browser, which in the case of grandparents, is probably true.

I would just um…never tell them about the Android app store because that can get real messy real quick.

bam13302 ,

As much as i dislike google, chromebooks are perfect for anyone tech illiterate that just need a simple web browser that works. Every family member I’ve recommended a chromebook to has not needed additional tech support for it, which IMO, is a truly impressive accomplishment on google’s behalf.

ILikeBoobies , (edited )

Lol Linux is easier than Windows, you don’t need to know any troubleshooting secrets or bash. Even the installation is easier

How many people do you know with Android phones that know bash?

Terminal isn’t any more necessary on Linux than Windows but the commands are simpler

The downside of Linux is that it’s free, that means they can’t afford to pay manufacturers to include their OS at the same scale as Microsoft. Thus Windows will have more users and be a more profitable ecosystem to target software for

nestEggParrot ,

Equating Android and desktop linux isnt very accurate. Terminal on android is very limited compared to linux. Many common softwares are still installed with commands and occasionally need maintenance and most are done via commands.

Recently helped a few setup ubuntu as dual boot. Installation isnt always smooth and most accompanying software stores are buggy or dont have many commonly used softwares.

ILikeBoobies ,

Endeavour + pamac > Ubuntu + snaps

nestEggParrot ,

Cant comment on endeavour as I’ve not used it. Not fan of snaps either and go for deb when on ubuntu. Now pop doesnt even have snaps by default.

Only reason I might install snap is becos I want to try microk8s and not setup a full on k8s cluster.

ILikeBoobies ,

There is also Nix package manager that people can have fun with

nestEggParrot ,

Are you saying i can try microk8s via kix rather than snap? If so more reason to learn and setup nix manager.

ILikeBoobies ,

Apparently not, they aren’t deploying it any other way

It’s a shame but I guess it’s canonical

Zino ,

Been using Ubuntu on my desktop for a couple of years, following a couple years use of WSL (so I’m very comfortable using the terminal etc)

Off the top of my head, some of the stuff I ran into almost immediately:

  • the package manager has been essentially unusable - the home page will work okay, but trying to view or install any applications through it, it just hangs forever. So I just go and use apt-get, but that’s not what I’d call ‘easier’ or ‘just works’
  • Firefox windows regularly break - the contents of the page still work fine but I can’t resize or move the window, have to close it and open a new one. This happens multiple times a day
  • only way I could get the discord app installed was with a .deb (since the package manager didn’t work), so as soon as it’s out of date I just get a message saying “you need to update”. So I have to use it in the browser
  • speaking of discord - I like to use push to talk. Guess what, push to talk is impossible with Wayland. Supposedly this is a feature, not a bug
  • also couldn’t get vnc working to remote home while travelling, due to Wayland. Maybe if I persisted with troubleshooting I could have got it to work, but it took me 30s on windows.
  • installed zoom - it won’t launch from the gui, I have to launch it from the terminal. Also, ‘join this meeting’ web links don’t work, I have to copy paste them into the app

There’s plenty more quirks I run into all the time but thats just shit I run into with a clean install and very typical hardware.

I love interacting with Linux through the terminal - I hate interacting with it through a gui. That’s not my definition of easier lol

ILikeBoobies ,

Have you tried just downloading the app image off of websites and running it that way? Most windows users don’t use the windows repos

I’ve had no issues with Firefox or discord but I don’t use wayland

flontlocs ,

Not my Kubuntu experience, and sounds like something broke.

Which can happen with Windows too.

stewie3128 ,

The OS I direct the technologically-illiterate to when I don’t plan on supporting it myself is invariably iOS. Boomers don’t need anything more anyway.

AzPsycho ,

When I worked as a IT Tech at a University years ago we had a lot of MacOS users who believed they could just pick it up and use it like their iPhone. It was absurd how well their marketing worked because those users either forced themselves to learn it or dropped it and went back to Windows.

I know a lot of iOS users who have iPads and iPhones but still have windows PCs because they don’t have to worry about compatibility issues.

Fangslash ,

I’m one of those guys, IOS phone with windows PC. There really isn’t much out there that is as convenient as IOS, but theres no way I would use a Mac, as compatibility issues and more expensive hardware will ultimately hurt functionality.

seananigans ,

I know you made a joke about MacOS, but I am genuinely interested with what issue you have of it.

Beliriel ,

It sucks in the way you understand and know because nothing else even exists. No one is interested in having to cater to their walled garden unless there’s money to be made. Meanwhile both Linux and Windows have many open source projects and hobbyists working on things. So you might get a mac driver for something you buy but most of the time macos is an afterthought at best in many hobby projects. Also lol mac gaming is a joke. Even Linux is getting better support now than macos in that regard since the Steamdeck.

doggle ,

I haven’t used macOS in years, so now it might actually be the golden pie in the sky “it just works” OS that Apple’s fans have always pretended it was. But Apple’s condescending “we know what’s best for you” attitude that they take into iOS (and nearly everything else they do) puts me off from giving them a second chance.

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah it was just a joke because I love to piss off the MacOS guys. But its like a brotherly teasing. Like, I love you guys, but I gotta rib you, you know.

I think Apple’s biggest sin is that everything works as long as all of your hardware, software, and co-workers have an apple emblazoned on their back. But the moment you have to work with anything or anyone that doesnt use Apple, you have problems. And Apple seems to encourage this because it gets their users to dread working with Windows or Linux users.

The sad thing is that I like a lot of their software. But using their OS is like having Steve Jobs standing over your shoulder and smacking you on the head when you try to shift outside of their intended workflow. I keep running into situations where Windows and Linux would let me go left or right (after finding a hidden and misnamed switch or running a well researched and crafted bash command), and MacOS just put a roadblock on the left because fuck you we said no.

I know that my ideal of a perfect OS is unrealistic. MacOS is more stable because it’s more rigid. Windows and Linux prove that the more flexible you are, the harder it is to use. But settling for one option and looking down at everyone who chose different isn’t going to help. We should all keep criticising our chosen option and root for others that are criticising their own. Because it seems like Apple, Microsoft, and the Open Source community are all in a rut, safely ignoring basic fucking usage issues because of an implicit assumption that their user base isn’t going anywhere.

I live in a mixed OS household. My wife and I both use windows and Apple machines for various purposes (my wife’s work requires both, my mac is just for dabbling) and I have some linux boxes for streaming or storage or whatever. And while that gives me the benefits of all three, I also have to deal with the problems of all three. And its a lot, guys. Not to mention they all refuse to work together.

kyub , (edited )

It depends. It could also be a better idea to introduce a sort of “IT driver’s license” for everyone to have basic understanding/skills to use their devices. Sure, modern software stacks are ridiculously complex and no one understands every detail down to each machine code/assembly instruction, so there’s always a big amount of abstraction or simplification needed, but I don’t think it’s a good idea to request that someone with literal zero knowledge whatsoever should be able to perfectly use an OS or device. That’s also not even possible. I see it with my mother, she started from zero knowledge but she had to learn some basics to be able to do the few things she needs to do. Of course she uses Linux. No prior Windows knowledge means a much easier start with Linux of course. She wouldn’t have been able to use Windows either with zero knowledge. So this is a point that some forget: even Windows users need knowledge to be able to use Windows, and they probably already earned that knowledge in much earlier years. This Windows knowledge also works against you building up Linux (or even OS X) knowledge because Windows works quite differently from a Unix-like OS. This is not irrelevant: a Windows user who spent like 30 years in Windows has a much harder time learning Linux, than someone who didn’t have that. But, again, not really the fault of Linux that you indoctrinated yourself with Windows-only MS product specific knowledge over the last decades. This is probably the biggest problem there is, because almost everyone on the planet has already acquired some amount of Windows knowledge in the past. This works against you when trying to switch. Windows knowledge is mostly Windows-specific. When learning about IT, you should make sure that you learn things in a preferably OS agnostic way. Which is also the reason why schools etc. should never teach “using MS products”. They should always teach fundamentals, irrelevant of what you use afterwards. And those fundamentals should of course not be taught using commercial products, but rather open source software.

Then there are some fantasies which MS and Apple could establish in the broader population which aren’t true, for example that CLI/terminal usage is archaic and has no place on modern desktops anymore. CLI usage will always remain as a fast alternative to a lot of tasks which are hard or even impossible to do via GUI. Even MS has realized this and introduced Powershell, a new terminal, and winget, for example. As well as WSL (which was originally and still mostly is being used to have access to powerful Linux-based CLI utilities). Yet still a lot of people seem to think that CLI is obsolete or that it’s “hard”. Sure, if you do some scripting or complex one-liners, it can be too hard for someone without strong IT knowledge. But most commands are really basic and easy to understand. Even my mother is able to use basic commandline utilities, and she even prefers it sometimes over clicking around in the GUI. To claim that this is impossible or too hard to learn for a Windows user is, I don’t know. At least untrue. Probably even an insult to your own intelligence. And the main reason why most Linux users suggest doing things via commandline is that this is an almost distro- and desktop-independent way of doing things.

Also, not a big fan of the “fan” label here. Regardless of whether or not you like Linux (I like Linux as an OS more than Windows, because I think the Unix-way is better, but it’s also about so much more), I see a neutral, free/libre open source (FLOSS) operating system as the base for our digital lives as a necessity, and so I see Windows or OS X as intrinsically worse. I don’t see it as a kind of war between different products on equal footing. One product denies you any rights and control (and in more recent times, also extracts even more value and data from you than just the price you paid for the license to use it), and one that gives you full rights and control (and pretty much never extracts any more from you). It’s not OK that we use our devices for so many things in life nowadays, that all aspects of your life are being done via digital means nowadays, and yet the most popular operating systems are still 100% proprietary black boxes fully controlled by big US companies. This needs to change, and it should have happened a long time ago already. And Linux is simply the most mature and most well supported FLOSS operating system out of all of them. I actually wouldn’t care if it would be FreeBSD or OpenBSD or whatever instead, but I see Linux as being the most mature, well-supported and mainstream-viable option here. I only care that it’s not a damn black box I don’t have any real control over.

We need (almost) everyone on such open technologies like Linux, because the future (or even present) for Windows users looks like this: no control, no privacy (plus AI being trained on your work/data as well), big vulnerability when (not if) MS gets hacked (and they’re a huge, juicy target, and we already saw them being compromised twice in the last couple of years), pricey subscription to MS’ services which continues to get pricier once you’re successfully vendor-locked-in (once all your servers, desktops and data is in MS’ cloud, you won’t be able to easily leave their services anymore, so they are free to increase prices until it hurts you). Even if you happen to like the offering MS gives you, does that really seem like “the future” of computing to you? To me, that’s backwards. Or mainframe history repeating itself. Moving into proprietary clouds with vendor-lock-in only really benefits the cloud provider, which is why they want all users to join the “party”.

I’m not a big fan of Stallman in general, but his fundamental propositions e.g. that FLOSS software is intrinsically better than proprietary black boxes, is true. I wonder how long we still need as a society, to arrive at that realization. I assumed that the Snowden revelations as well as the desaster that Windows 10 was for privacy, would have already started a change in thinking about such things. But that probably wasn’t enough (strangely). I’m not sure what else would need to happen, but I guess something like first MS shoving all their users into their cloud, and then MS being hacked (again) but this time with malicious auto-updates being pushed to all MS software users as well, impacting tons of businesses. Then, maybe, people will start thinking whether this was such a great idea to begin with to play along with what MS envisioned as the “grand future”. Unfortunately I see parallels with the human behavior concerning climate change here as well. It’s like we have to first destroy our climate and suffer the consequences, before we realize it’s a bad idea and we should do it differently RIGHT NOW. We are just incredibly short-sighted and we only learn AFTER disasters, which were even announced long before. It’s tragic.

And for those people who know or think they could start using Linux but still use Windows because it’s more “aesthetically pleasing” or whatever else irrelevant aspect they make up to “justify” still staying on that sinking MS ship in 2023, please reconsider your priorities.

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Uh huh.

please reconsider your priorities

Ngl, I laughed pretty hard when I saw that you ended your giant rant with this line.

vacuumflower ,

Let me introduce you to FreeDOS!

eochaid ,
@eochaid@lemmy.world avatar

Nah.

vreraan ,

This is a pointless argument even saying that everyone sucks, linux runs worse on the desktop because it doesn’t get even 1/10th the investment from consumer hardware manufacturers compared to windows or mac to make it compatible. nevertheless linux is undoubtedly less difficult and more efficient to integrate than windows, for example the steam deck is done very well but it could be done better since KDE, wayland and arch do not have the same number of employees as microsoft.

HEXN3T , to memes in Every time...
@HEXN3T@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

This is wholly accurate

Zehzin , to memes in what could it mean?
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

If I was Stanley I’d just have gone home

SpaceMan9000 ,

There is an ending in which you go home?

DmMacniel ,

Yes but then you go crazy as you vidily proclaim that you are a real person. And then everything turns black.

lemmyseizethemeans , to memes in what could it mean?

Only one way to find out. Go search. And search. And

letsgo , to memes in Bangladesh, Ghana, and Mauritius celebrate their independence from the crown this month

Brit here. It’s great to be part of a country that brings so much joy to so many people.

astraeus ,
@astraeus@programming.dev avatar

American here, proud to see we started a trend. (And that’s pretty much the only thing to be proud of as an American)

UnrepententProcrastinator ,

Technically the british parted from their own government first…

CodyCannoli , to memes in what could it mean?

I love the broom closet ending, that one’s my favorite.

aldalire , to memes in what could it mean?

Now you’re stuck in the backrooms. The lights turn off. You hear a loud growl.

HoseanRC OP ,

“Wait, why did the lights go off? Stanley… did you touch anything? This isn’t how the story work!”

loo , to linux_gaming in Riot official response about League of Legends on Linux for Vanguard anti cheat
@loo@lemmy.world avatar

My main issue with this blog post is that rather than properly addressing concerns, they make fun of them.

It’s not a rootkit, journalists just spread misinformation for clicks

Why is it not a rootkit, then??

Aux ,

Because journalists.

yggstyle ,

A blog toxic as it’s community? Gasp.

A long while back riot used to be a fun sorta disruptive thing that was pretty healthy overall. It was awkward and fun. That was before it was purchased though. Now riot exists to make money for big china. It isn’t that company anymore. It’s a facade.

You can’t fix it, nor can the employees.

Riot is a skinpuppet that has no autonomy. Unlike the employees though, we have the choice to leave that failing franchise and move on. Rootkits aren’t acceptable and that needs to be the standard. It wasn’t okay when Sony tried it in the name of anti-piracy and it’s still not okay now. No person should be okay with installing a black box with greater admin rights than they have on their own machine. That is not okay. It is security heresy. That blog uses hand waving and bullshit to sell the concept to people that don’t know any better. And honestly? That’s almost just as bad as the rootkit itself.

A rough translation is:

Be a good drone and put the slave collar on. It’s good for you. Don’t ask questions, you don’t need to know why. Just do it. You are the product and you have no rights.

slumberlust ,

I disagree that they went downhill post-purchase. They were shit from the very start when pendragon decided to burn one community to promote his own in the name of capitalism.

yggstyle ,

They had their issues, sure. But most studios will have burned bridges in their wake. Not a hard and fast rule of course.

When I refer to downhill I’m looking directly at the slippery slope that is changing from profit as a target to profit above all else. When you sell a company regardless of who you retain - there will be a value shift as the head drives the body. The existing cracks got worse and new ones formed. People that care the most generally give up, leave, or both and the whole thing falls in on the void left by those support’s absences.

You may be right that a shift in ideal started then. I’m not terribly familiar with the story so I’ll defer to you on that.

KillingTimeItself ,

because on windows it’s not considered a rootkit, it’s consider user obscured feature sets.

jkrtn ,

I guess the difference is in whether or not the victim was complicit with installing spyware in the kernel.

laurelraven ,

If that’s the distinction they’re going with, they don’t actually know what a rootkit is and have no business declaring something is or isn’t one

sukhmel , to memes in what could it mean?

Don’t wait for the Langoliers to appear!

Kefass , to lemmyshitpost in Life hack

Or, exit game…

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