640kb Now • 100%
640kb Now • 100%
I can still remember running Windows 3.1 on my Windows 98 Pentium machine (booted into DOS 7.0). The sheer responsiveness... In a blink of an eye the system was ready, apps would open. The last time I felt this kind of responsive speed was running KolibriOS: http://www.kolibrios.org/en/
I've run plenty of low resource OSes/Distros on low-end hardware but... there's nothing sweeter than running low resource OSes on high end hardware - it feels like the future (the way it was suppose to be).
640kb Now • 87%
Google accomplished step 1 and they failed on step 2. So... no.
Facebook being the entrench monopoly and Google+ being the new competitor. Unlike Facebook, Google tried to bulldoze their way into a new market.
Instagram and Threads/Twitter have user bases of a similar mindset. Google never had a user base that was of a Facebook (social media) mindset - they have a ton of randos. They tried to convert these randos into real people (social media) by forcing the Real Name policy at the time (ie, bulldozing their way into a new market).
They think their failure with Google+ was because there was already a monopoly in place. Their failure was that they were trying to get one mindset interested in something completely different. Meta generally applies a similar formula - creating and cultivating the social media mindset. Each company (each new brand) adding to the whole. Their core users respond to the new companies because it's stuff they are already interested in. It worked like a charm with Threads.
The Metaverse was (too much) a departure from that mindset and we saw how badly that turned out (3 billion users or not). So Step 1, Step 2... sorry, no.
I think Google could follow this (meta) playbook and create new brand names (TikTok & On Demand Streaming) instead of hiding these services within the general Youtube brand. In the same way Meta just did with the Instagram to Threads conversion. I still think this was impressive and even moreso that they didn't let the Metaverse disaster make them timid (Like Google+ did with Google).
(edit: clarity)
640kb Now • 100%
Not a fan, at all, of Meta/Facebook but the way they rolled this out - by tying it to instagram - was/is impressive.
The other big tech firms are taking lots of notes - especially those that have big user bases. Because this is how you roll out a new competitor to an entrench monopoly.
640kb Now • 100%
the extension would be even more interesting if it could work on any link on the web:
A disqus replacement? Now that would be interesting indeed.
640kb Now • 100%
I don't think there's a single "main" computer anymore. My home computer is Linux Mint Cinnamon. My mobile computer (which I use nearly as much as my desktop OS) is Android.
My next smartphone is going to allow installing a privacy-respecting custom ROM (because Linux on mobile really isn't there yet). Once I do that, I'll focus on f-droid apps only. Something to look forward to.
640kb Now • 100%
Reddit used to be able to do two things. 1. Allow me to express myself and 2. Entertain. They really stopped entertaining me a long while ago. They also didn't engage me enough for me to want to express myself. I already had a foot out the door.
Point 1 is filled with Hacker News, Lemmy and tildes. They are all similar but different. With lemmy... you kind of take your shoes off and relax (respectfully). With HN and Tildes: you are the best version of yourself.
Point 2 is taken up by TikTok. I use TikTok on an older dedicated secondary tablet with a fake gmail account, no contacts. The tablet only does TikTok and nothing else in order to alleviate privacy issues, etc.
HN, Lemmy, tildes and TikTok provide an experience that far surpasses that of reddit.
640kb Now • 100%
Agreed. The only reason I found Liftoff was because of this post (List of lemmy apps): https://lemmy.ml/post/1466515
It still doesn't show up for me on when I'm on Google Play.
640kb Now • 100%
The website actually uses these words... "Formerly known as reddit is fun." Feels like a hint that it's not going completely away but possibly morphing into LiF... At least that's what I'd like to think:-)
640kb Now • 100%
That, or Christian made a pretty expensive mistake...
I wouldn't put a lot pass /u/spez, including offering special deals on API pricing. Especially if he thinks it would make Christian Selig look bad.
It's precisely the kind of thing a lying, gaslighting and vindictive /u/spez would do.
640kb Now • 100%
I'm pretty sure it was 'Starship Troopers'.
640kb Now • 50%
My synopsis is that if any big corporations joined the Fediverse they would fracture it.
I'm not so sure. Facebook has an onion version that runs on the tor network. Big tech dominates the clear web but there's plenty of room for everyone else.
Ultimately you have user types. In a few more months, LemmyVerse could have a couple of million active users.
I'd bet the vast majority would scoff at a fediverse version of Facebook. It's just a different crowd - not unlike the tor network where Facebook (probably, maybe?) exists in nmae only.
640kb Now • 100%
The irony is that reddit is creating its own competition - when before there was nothing.
Back tracking a few years when digg began to self-destruct, reddit was, in fact, a viable competitor.
Reddit never had a competitor until reddit itself, through the sheer incompetence of its gaslighting CEO, forced the creation of multiple (now) viable competitors.
640kb Now • 100%
This is a nice one. Pleasantly surprised that an Android client existed and that it was pretty good too.
640kb Now • 100%
My sentiments exactly. I wonder what it's like for the reddit staff to work with such a gaslighting, condescending and deceitful boss.
We owe the Apollo dev a lot for shining a bright light at the leadership of reddit and specifically /u/spez.
640kb Now • 100%
I never understood why Digg doubled-down on the decisions that drove their users away. It was crazy to see that unfold in real time. Now... I'm seeing it again with reddit. It makes no sense.
Even worse... I've seen a lying, gaslighting CEO oblivious to the direct results of his actions. A CEO who continues to make inflammatory statements.
Even if reddit finally concedes on everything, I don't want to be a part of a site led by such an individual. I can't even begin to imagine how condescending he is with the reddit staff. Steve Huffman needs to go.