Not ideologically pure.

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  • 83 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: January 8th, 2024

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  • Fellow Dvorak user here. Can’t recommend it enough.

    In one of my classes at the beginning of my doctoral studies we talked about parth dependency, and QWERTY was used as an example. All studies showed that even experienced typists would increase their typing speed within just a few days of switching, and that it’s just a superior set-up. But because of path dependency we all write QWERTY.

    I changed my layout the same day and I haven’t looked back. If you want to start messing around with your keyboard and you use it for typing, switching to Dvorak should be the obvious first step. Colemak is a compromise solution that is still a lot better than QWERTY and probably quicker to learn.

    No need to get a new keyboard. Dvorak is designed around touch typing, you won’t be looking at the keyboard anyway.


  • The hatred is partly fuelled by people in the open source community getting really riled up when they find out some open source projects are developed by organizations that need to earn money and pay their employees, be it Red Hat, Canonical, GNOME, Mozilla, or anything else. Female leadership will tend to push people over the edge.

    In addition to the usual rage-fuelled misogyny of open source forums, there is however also valid concern out there. It can be difficult to hear through the noise.

    Mozilla’s job listings provide some insight to what many consider to be a red flag for the way forward. To work on FireFox, they are looking for:

    • Senior Staff Machine Learning Engineer, Gen AI
    • Senior Director of Product, Firefox Growth
    • Principal Product Manager, Generative AI
    • Senior Software Engineer - Layout (CSS and ICU4X Support)
    • Staff Machine Learning Engineer, Gen AI
    • Staff Full-stack Engineer - Generative AI
    • Senior Front End Engineer, Gen AI
    • Senior Front-End Engineer, Firefox
    • Front-End Engineer, Firefox
    • Staff Software Engineer - Credential Management
    • Staff Software Engineer - Release Engineering
    • Senior Front-End Software Engineer, New Tab

    For fairness I include every position, highlighting in bold the ones I think are likely to do more harm than good. This is not the direction I want FireFox to take, and I believe Mozilla are misguided to try to place themselves as the ethical AI actor. That said I’m not 100% against it all of the time - I do think the local in-browser machine translation feature of newer releases is great. But I don’t think I want much more than that, and even this feature should probably have been an optional plug-in.

    There’s also some former empolyees voicing valid concerns.

    In short, I think the legitimate criticism boils down to:

    1. Buying into the AI hype
    2. Flirting with “more ethical” ads and tracking, rather than being unquestionably on the user’s side of just blocking it all
    3. Doing too many things nobody asked for, arguably while not paying enough attention to FireFox
    4. Appearing distant from the community and unresponsive to its preferences
    5. Paying company leadership too much

    I don’t really buy into point 3 personally. I use FireFox every day and it’s by far the best browser I have ever had. It never gives me any problems at all, and password sync with Android is really useful. I wish it would support JPG XL, but that’s pretty much it in terms of complaints on my end.


  • New in this release:

    • Separate audio and video streams, so that only one audio track is stored on the server even if there are multiple resolutions for a video, and viewers can choose only to stream audio. You can also do audio-only live streams. Cool.
    • Browse subtitles, search them, click on them, read them to a friend
    • Better video fetching from Youtube channels, in case you post there first
    • Smaller tweaks to improve user experience

    Cool stuff.

    PS: My favourite way to keep up to date on PeerTube content is to go to Piefed, press the search button, choose “PeerTube” under Instance Software and sort by “Recent first”. It shows content from all PieFed channels subscribed to by PieFed users, so it’s a limited scope, but I still think it’s a nice little feed.






  • Yeah, for sure. Doing something great doesn’t shield you from also making some really shitty decisions or holding some god-awful positions.

    I just think it’s good to keep a nuance of language. Too many open source developers burn out, and a hostile community is listed as one of the reasons too often. There will always be disagreements, and there are valid ways of voicing it, but one should never forget that there is humans on the other side and remain kind. :)


  • The devs are working hard providing a public service that they make available for everyone. And the product they’ve developed is pretty impressive, in spite of its shortcomings.

    They hold some opinions I disagree with pretty strongly, and I’m not a fan of every decision they make. But they’re creating a truly common good, and for that they deserve praise. From a technical perspective, they have created something completely new that serves thousands of users and constitutes a system of huge complexity. They very much do not suck.

    Anyone who thinks any person maintaining an open source project “sucks” should feel free to fork the project, fix whatever they’re not happy with, and maintain the repository and handle commits and all the shit that goes down in managing a large open source project. After dedicating all this time to people, some random ingrate will inevitably disagree with some minor decision they’ve made and decide that they “suck”.


  • Yeah. If they pushed it to the bottom of the list, or even removed them from the list but kept the user count, I could kind of understand it. But censoring them completely for being too successful seems like shooting yourself in the foot.

    Lemmy.world is doing great and I’m happy for it and all that, but… 20 000 monthly active users does not exactly make them a tech giant that needs to be kept in check just yet. Ideally, instances of 20 000 active users should be quite normal at some point, and having stress tested the software before then should, one assumes, be a good thing.


  • Yeah, I think you’re right, and I think that’s exactly why it’s a blind spot for me.

    On several occasions I’ve also lent an old laptop to friends when theirs broke, and all of them ended up using Linux for months no questions asked. They later went back to Windows because of the Word grammar check, but other than that it just worked for them.

    But of course, if you can’t get your drivers to work it’ll be a completely different experience.




  • A test could be to start by using Libre software on Windows.

    Switch to LibbreOffice or some other alternative instead of Word. Gimp, Inkscape, and Krita for graphical stuff. Whatever proprietary software you use, check if it exists for Linux; if not, see if you can find an alternative you’re happy with.

    For the people I know, Word is the biggest deal breaker.


  • Dumb user here. I completely disagree with this.

    I was using Ubuntu for a few years, now I’m on Fedora. I don’t really know how to do anything. For my needs it’s just very easy.

    Maybe my needs just aren’t sophisticated enough for me to encounter all those problems I’m supposed to be having. But I’ve been using it for years and my experience is that it really just works.