I bought my mom a pixel and installed graphene on it and gave her. She is by no means a power user. Never underestimate the will of nerds to go a step further :)
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fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 to add an AI agent that runs in background with access to personal folders, warns of security riskEnglish
7·11 days agoThey are getting more aggressive by the day it seems. Luckily I’ve been windows free for 10 years now. And recently, I switched almost my entire extended family to Linux mint to great success. Only my brother in law still uses win, cause of games, specifically anti cheat - the last hurdle for many people.
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World News@lemmy.world•Surgeons remove up to 100 magnets - which have been banned in the country but bought online on Temu - from New Zealand teen’s gutEnglish
151·25 days agoNot trying to defend temu, they are definitely careless enough to breach way bigger restrictions than this. However, don’t just ignore the rest of the context here.
- Almost no country bans small magnets
- Almost no child eats 100s of them
- It is easy for a store so vast to not know about a restriction so specific and so unusual
It’s unreasonable of you to only direct blame to Temu (which are know to be negligent and aggressive at testing the limits of what they can get away with) in this particular, unusual case.
No, I mean, both graphene and lineage are based on aosp. But graphene supports only one vendor. Lineageos supports many, including google. Why invest in a vendor-locked os and risk loosing it all? I think lineage is a lot more logical choice. And I’m currently running Graphene on a pixel 8, after pixel 7.
If google restricts access to its os, like they have already started, all you’ll have is pixel up to 10/11 still supported 10 years from now. They’ve already started by no longer providing device trees in aosp for their phones, so graphene has to work harder to obtain them now. Whereas if you work on lineage, you potentially have a greater number of vendors and potentially new ones ready to open up to draw in new userbase.
Whaaat? Drop the OG free Android distribution that has already supported hundreds of phone models across decades for a Google locked hardware with unknown future support from a vendor just announcing locking down everything they can? What is your logic?
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Trump's Nobel Prize desperation now a 'running joke' among diplomatsEnglish
4·2 months agoIndeed. That any imperialist ruler or diplomat gets a peace prize is absurd. Especially from the USA, but any big power would also be absurd.
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Thoughts on stremio? And more generally, when should I worry about trackers?
1·2 months agoExactly. Which is also why I use it as well :)
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Thoughts on stremio? And more generally, when should I worry about trackers?
2·2 months agoI use stremio as well. But I also know Deluge has a plugin allowing you to stream a selected file from a torrent and it works with vlc
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•BREAKING: 4 Israeli soldiers missing, others killed in resistance ambush in Zeitoun neighbourhood east of Gaza: Israel mediaEnglish
2·3 months ago…and four brave cowboys lost their hats…
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Serbian authorities using spyware to illegally surveil activists, report findsEnglish
7·1 year agoOh, great, my country is in the news again. Oh, wait, it’s bad news, again. Here’s some better news: the students have blocked all the universities and other people are joining the protests in hopes of overthrowing the authoritarian regime. The corruption has reached peak levels and is actually killing people. The government is doing it’s best to stay in power, but no real, mass violence has been applied just yet. People have given up on elections because they are demonstrably fixed and can’t change anything. I don’t know how this will end.
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Intel hasn't sold a single Arrow Lake CPU at Germany's largest retailer — Core Ultra 200S sales stagnate after just one weekEnglish
8·1 year agoYou don’t buy from TSMC, but from Intel. Also, AMD also uses TSMC, they didn’t have such problems recently.
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Technology@lemmy.world•Elon's Death Machine (aka Tesla) Mows Down Deer at Full Speed , Keeps Going on "Autopilot"English
5·1 year agoAgree, it didn’t do anything to avoid the obstacle. A human could probably see it as an obstacle and try to swerve to the side, albeit not knowing what it is. Not saying it’s possible to avoid, but some reaction would be made.
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Linux@lemmy.ml•One Of The Rust Linux Kernel Maintainers Steps Down - Cites "Nontechnical Nonsense"
20·1 year agoWell, I’ve been a C/C++ dev for half of my career, I didn’t find Rust syntax ugly. Some things are better than others, but not a major departure from C/C++. ObjC is where ugly is at. And I even think swift is more ugly. In fact, I can’t find too many that are as close to C/C++ as Rust. As for logic… Well, I want to say you’ll get used to it, but for some things, it’s not true. Rust is a struggle. Whether it’s worth it, is your choice. I personally would take it over C++ any day.
Have you tried zed? Written in rust, has many extensions. I gave it a try, I quite like it. It’s blazing fast. But I haven’t tried on an old machine.
fluxx@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Qualcomm Aiming For Snapdragon X Elite GPU Support In Linux 6.11
3·1 year agoFrom my small experience with Qualcomm in the past, I’m not too hopeful. In a company I used to work for, we wanted to use one of their SoC with Linux, which they claimed they supported. It was many years ago. But was full of closed binary blobs which even when signing NDAs, we couldn’t get the source for. We’re talking user-space drivers, sensors offloaded to a separate core with closed source firmware etc. It’s Linux, but it’s not Linux in spirit, it feels so closed and proprietary and secretive. They’re coming from Android, which google architecturally enabled vendors to close their drivers by utilizing HAL. It’s the single most significant blow to Linux by any corporation so far. It enabled thousands of vendors to close their shitty driver in user-space and not maintain it for newer kernels (kernel driver is just an IO proxy for user-space drivers). I get that without it, there wouldn’t be Android phones we have today, but I expected them to slowly open up. 10+ years later, almost nothing changed, in fact - things seem worse to me.
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homeassistant@lemmy.world•Home Assistant 2024.5: Just a little bit smallerEnglish
2·2 years agoAny PC that has virtualization features can be used. Unless it’s very old, I’d say it’s supported. But it may not be enabled in the bios by default. It’s called VT-x for Intel and AMD-v for AMD, I think. But both are supported for at least 10 years on almost any PC.
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homeassistant@lemmy.world•Home Assistant 2024.5: Just a little bit smallerEnglish
6·2 years agoIt’s a hypervisor level virtual machine host and you can use it to install multiple os’s on the same machine with little overhead. I’ve been running haos like that for a few months now and I’m super satisfied.
When you switched from pi3 to NUC , did you notice any performance improvements? I’m asking because I run my setup on a rpi3 and it mostly works ok, but the latency is sometimes high, so I’m wondering if upgrading the host will improve things.

Only for political opponents of west.