

That’s what they’re trying to do.
It makes most sense to switch the email+office users to Linux and reserve MacOs and Windows for users who really need to run specific applications.
That’s what they’re trying to do.
It makes most sense to switch the email+office users to Linux and reserve MacOs and Windows for users who really need to run specific applications.
More or less, yes.
Germany and France have been trying this for more than two decades.
But every time, there is pressure from the US government (the stick) and Microsoft arranges a short-term deal to make Windows cheaper than the cost of transitioning (the carrot).
But this time, the EU is serious about decoupling from the US, so I think it will actually happen.
There already is blood.
Jan 6th
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Wadea_al-Fayoume
But I understand your point. You’re saying there will be much more blood.
Sadly, you are right. 😔
Agreed, this article would have made sense in 2020 or earlier.
And now we have the fediverse, which is causing a resurgence of content that is independent of Reddit or Discord.
Most people use seedboxes for private trackers, which are superior and just as private as a VPN.
But yeah, it’s a different ecosystem and it’s not for everyone.
I do think it has replaced the old DC++ hubs of old.
To my knowledge, both eMule and DC++ are still active, but I think private trackers have become the more dominant technology for file sharing.
I agree.
Ideally, there are two types of profiles:
Archivalists who have a lot of storage and need pretty good uptime, but no need for high bandwidth. They should be rewarded for archiving, because they don’t really get a lot of upload credit.
Distributors who need low storage, high bandwidth, robust connections when online, but not necessarily high uptime. They just distribute the new and popular stuff.
I think the better private trackers recognize this and have systems in place to provide credit to people who seed rare torrents.
I agree. It also works the other way in terms of censorship.
My original account was on an instance that once censored one of my comments. I don’t remember if they deleted my comment or banned me from the community.
On reddit, I had come to just accept that as a fact of life and every few years I would delete my old account and register a new one.
On Lemmy, I just switched to a different instance which is much more tolerant of free speech and I haven’t had issues since.
The irony is, my comments on the old instance can still be deleted, but only for users from that instance.
I don’t know the full details, but Lemmy definitely has the more 2000-2010 type of culture that allows people to speak their mind freely.
Yeah, I think their CEO might have QNAP stock or something.
It’s hilarious how dumb this is.