- 109 Posts
- 300 Comments
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
Android@lemmy.world•Google's Pixel 10a arrives on March 5 for $499 with specs and design of yesteryearEnglish
1·17 days agoSony also has the headphone jack I think. But Sony’s phone releases have gotten ahem much less frequent. I don’t think even the company is treating it with much foresight (I forget the last time I saw a Sony phone in somebody 's hands).
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•South Korea has passed a major Copyright Act Amendment cracking down on manga and manhwa piracy.English
143·1 month agoWhen million dollar AI companies pirate everything in the world
Silence
When one single person pirates something
Jail time
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Android@lemdro.id•Fairphone 6 review: cheaper, repairable and longer-lasting AndroidEnglish
4·1 month agoI wish it was available in more parts of the world. I don’t mind the mid range specs (they are decent enough for my use case). The long update cycle plus presence of microSD slot is a good thing. Does it have, by an chance, the good old 3.5 mm Jack as well?
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Where is Linux not working well in your daily usage? Share your pain points as of 2026, so we can respectfully discuss
2·2 months agoIt is not a power profile problem since I have looked into that. Even under normal circumstances, simple stuff like having tons of tabs open cause it to creak. Yes the hardware is not cutting edge but my previous laptop was worse (4 GB Ram) and whilst Linux showed it’s limits then, it never came close to crashing ever. I don’t think my Debian install in the past ever freezed on older laptop.
But it is bonkers on this model.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•‘Exclusively for the elite’: why Mumbai’s new motorway is a symbol of the divide between rich and poorEnglish
2·2 months agoMumbai is an exercise in public transport gone wrong. The suburban transit system there, despite running to its fullest capacity, creaks and is literal life threatening. Ironical because Mumbai is one of the richest cities in India and yet lives are a penny there.
Delhi is India’s national capital. Sure, the metro there also sees heavy crowds but one would need to be actively suicidal to somehow die there (the tracks and platforms are automatically gated at many stations). Both serve the common people, but one is emblematic of being faster, modern and most of all, not being a death trap.
So why did Mumbai did not copy Delhi’s success? Well, first they started off with a monorail project that has lower speeds, lower capacity and incompatible with the newer subway/metro tracks. To say it’s a disaster is an under statement. They quickly changed tracks (pun intended) and switched to conventional metro system. But the latter is so bare bones and much smaller than what the city needs.
Every single year Mumbai delays it’s metro, the suburban system will continue to creak and people continue to lose limbs and/or die. Investing in this fancy road instead of modern public transit isn’t just prioritising the rich; it’s saying that the poor and middle class lives don’t matter.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Where is Linux not working well in your daily usage? Share your pain points as of 2026, so we can respectfully discuss
1·2 months agoThis issue did not affect my previous laptop. However, under heavy load, my current laptop sometimes freezes and even REISUB sometimes failed to work. The only way is to force power off via button.
This persisted across all distros from Debian based to Fedora to current Void.
Other times, laptop will stutter to a near halt post some complex process and even after said process(like a Handbrake task) is closed, continues to act as if the resources were never freed.
I only used Windows 11 for a single month b/w 2016- current (other wise, distro hopping was default) and it was stable. I can’t pin point the actual root cause (driver issues, kernel level problem) but still persist with Linux (Windows has its own stuff of problems that we all are aware).
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•When you get tired of Distrohopping
39·2 months agoThere is no one reliable distro. Mint, itself is based off Ubuntu and also releases LMDE (Linux Mint Debian Edition).
If reliablility is measured in terms of how stable a distro is, then likely Debian with it’s conservative approach to packaging updates comes to mind (No wonder large number of distros are based off Debian only).
I would even argue as long as someone isn’t messing with a niche distro such as KDE Neon( meant to showcase KDE packages) or Linuxfx (or whatever it has renamed itself to, one of the few shady ones IMO ) or Trisquel OS (a GNU certified distro where running into dependency hell isn’t new); it will suit user’s case.
Debian, Slackware, Void, Zorin, even rolling release like Arch (basically any one that meets the user’s use case is reliable)
Betteridge’s law of headlines strikes again!
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Android@lemmy.world•Honor launches Win and Win RT gaming-focused smartphones with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset and massive 10,000 mAh batteryEnglish
3·2 months ago80 W wireless charging
That even one ups the Oneplus 50W that requires a custom charging pad (or something I think). I find it quite ironical that wireless charging on some phones is now more than twice as fast as that on Pixel series (Wired)
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Opera wants you to pay $20 a month to use its AI-powered browser Neon
9·3 months agoOpera did ditch their own browser engine long time back and are now just a skin on Chromium [like many other browsers]. Opera, for some reason, has multiple browsers running. Neon isn’t their main offering as of now. They technically have Opera GX [gaming focused version] and Opera Air [released some months earlier though I haven’t used the latter] as well.
Dawn (newspaper in question) seems to have come downhill. They used to have a respected name amongst Pakistan’s newspapers. I wonder how many other newspapers (across the world, in general) are slowly getting on this AI trend.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
28·3 months agoThere is no way to be sure. Either case, it can be a case of Hanlon’s razor. “Never attribute to malice [in this case: baiting] what can sufficiently be explained by stupidity”.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
43·3 months agoAmongst the apps mentioned as bloated on Windows were Teams, Discord (major offender) and WhatsApp. The latter is a curious case because a Universal Windows app existed (now being deprecated I guess?) that was more memory efficient than the Web wrapper.
And in case, someone in interested there is a terminal client for WhatsApp (and Telegram) called nchat. Sure, it is not at feature parity with web client (images is a big problem, for obvious reasons) but the simple fact that a third party client taking so little resources exists is a damning indictment of Meta. It shows that resource efficient clients are possible (provided the parent company junks the metaverse).
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
35·3 months agoIt is a generic one at a forum. The screenshot is from the comment section of Windows Latest site.
Back in the day on Reddit, some subs had a rule where names had to be blurred or removed. Since then, it is reflex for me to just cut out the author’s name (not that it mattered in this specific case).
If you have Spotify Premium, try a third party client. Even GUI clients like Spotify-qt are memory light [though not at feature parity] whilst terminal clients like ncspot, spotify-player take 1/10th the memory. The latter even supports Spotify connect.
The first response is in a satirical vein to the second (immediate below) one. The hiring for complex ML model is a dead giveaway.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•India orders smartphone makers to preload state-owned cyber safety appEnglish
9·3 months agostate-owned cyber security app that cannot be deleted
I think it’s called malware.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•SIM binding in India: What it means for WhatsApp, Telegram users and why the government wants itEnglish
21·3 months agoSheer uselessness. It will do as much to reduce fraud as the UK law has done to reduce porn content for non adults. What it will mean is that people with multiple SIM, will need to have an always active plan on that number, something telecoms will really like.
Also, it essentially means the death knell for WhatsApp Web (in India) because as stated in article, who wants to log in every SIX hours.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
LinkedinLunatics@sh.itjust.works•Economic growth is when you miss funerals
1·4 months agodeleted by creator




















I started with Ubuntu (when it was left, right and center in my country) but soon gravitated towards Debian. The old packages can be a pain sometimes ( I even tried running Debian Unstable for sometime and ironically that is quite Stable as well) but other things are quite sane.
The distro isn’t hard to use (though it does not hand hold like Zorin OS, say) compared to likes of Gentoo or Arch and deb packages are quite common (for third party software).
I ultimately(distro hopped a lot) settled on Void Linux but Debian, IMO, is still slightly easier. The only Achilles’ Heel is the woefully sore update cycle since the focus is on stability.