

Depends on the method, but a lot of normies find these pirate websites where you stream directly through a player on their website, and here they can serve ads, i.e. get money. Pirate Bay and the like also serves ads.
Depends on the method, but a lot of normies find these pirate websites where you stream directly through a player on their website, and here they can serve ads, i.e. get money. Pirate Bay and the like also serves ads.
Both of these games are very well made, but they both cater to a special type of gamer.
Elden Ring being incredibly well designed as an introduction to souls-likes, it still has the mechanics and difficulty like most of From Software’s games, with slight variation. If you’re not a gamer who likes overcoming a challenge, the game is likely not for you.
Death Stranding I think is quite the unique game, but much thanks to its weirdness. It has a lot of curious elements to it, but its incredibly story heavy. With different difficulty options you can make it a very casual experience, but it can be quite slow at times still. If you don’t like several dozen hours of cutscenes, the game might not be for you.
!languagelearning@sopuli.xyz is one, but I suppose you’re right that there isn’t one on Lemmy.zip.
The website looks simple and nice at first glance. Plenty of potential! Might I suggest a way of importing words too, like in different languages?
Learning languages is great, and I hope you’ll do well with the community! Make sure to introduce the community on places like !communitypromo@lemmy.ca and !communitypromo@feddit.org to try and get some additional traction.
I’m at A1 myself with a different language, and things are painfully slow at progressing, so every bit helps!
This is something I’d love to have for the past decade or so, but as I’m now transitioning to Linux I hope to not have much of this problem anymore.
Nice of you to create this though, and I share your tiredness of settings being changed behind our backs…
I’m also curious about this. If there are any transparency reports, I’d love to read through that.
The Wikimedia Foundation are trying to implement some AI solutions (for helping humans, not write articles/information), which is likely quite costly, unless someone donates it. However, I imagine many others’ scrapers for AI are constantly demanding a lot from the Wikipedia servers since some years ago, probably resulting in increased costs. Hopefully the AI builders use a local copy of the torrent instead, but I fear they don’t…
I’m still happily donating though, as I think the Wikipedia Foundation are still doing a solid job, despite me not always agreeing with their decisions.
[Defense Department] information must be approved for public release by an appropriate authorizing official before it is released, even if it is unclassified
This is ambiguous, and can be applied to any and all information acquired through the Defense Department.
Officials indicated the move was needed because any unauthorized disclosure “poses a security risk that could damage the national security of the United States and place [Defense Department] personnel in jeopardy.
Isn’t this exactly what constitutes the need for information to be classified?
So ultimately, what is the purpose of letting journalists in at all? To give a false sense of transparency?
It is reasonable to assume, indeed. Though in the bigger picture - long term - I think the pros outweigh the cons wrt. letting tourists in. The espionage will happen a lot regardless, only to a slightly lesser degree if we were to ban tourism, I imagine.
I think the answer to your second paragraph is a mix of corruption and conflicting ethical values (freedom of speech). Showing any form of double standard is know to be very potent propaganda ammunition, after all.
This is very reasonable of Navalnaya. I concur, that further isolating ordinary citizens will only make the bubble of propaganda and misinformation within Russia grow, which is to no one’s benefit.
Even if it’s a hard pill to swallow, given the hatred circulating, we should aim to help the common people whom show their dissent towards Kremlin, as they are yet another way of curbing Kremlin’s power. And all the political tension considered, who would want to travel the EU as Russian tourists these days, apart from those who have a positive perspective of the EU?
Can recommend Fairphone for exactly this.
If it results in a basis of good values later in life, I’d say it’s definitely worth the time of OP.
However, it’s arguable whether making a post on Lemmy is the right way to get feedback on rights and wrongs, although I’m positively surprised by the comments here being so understanding and constructive.
I’ll try and answer seriously, with some non-exclusive options, in no particular order:
These are just my guesses though, and I try and not delete anything personally. I’m aware that anything I put on the internet will be immortalized, and that the healthiest thing I can do is own both my mistakes and my opinions, even if I’m convinced of my stupidity or ignorance at a later time. I’m only a human after all, and doomed to talk before I think. Best I can do is to learn as much as possible from it, and hope that others can also learn from my actions.
I just gave it a go, and it’s painfully simple. Nevertheless charming and fun though! With the links provided the learning curve is very flat, so this is perhaps something to introduce to kids too.
Nice find! Just crossposted it
I might get downvoted for this, as I know the emotions are strong in this topic, but I’ll try and voice my humble opinion once again:
The Russian PEOPLE are not my enemy, KREMLIN is! And I don’t need stickers to tell me this. There are plenty of reports coming from independent journalists all over of not only the horrors that Kremlin motivates soldiers to commit in Ukraine, but what Kremlin is doing even towards civilians inside Russia! There’s a reason for the mass emigration and protests across Russia when this conflict first broke out, and that is that most of the people do not want unnecessary conflict. The Russian people suffer more and more, and also want this to end.
As long as Kremlin and its supporters are allowed to abuse their power however, the suffering will continue, so no mercy for them.
You seem to look at it quite pessimistically imho, but I’ll try and counter ;-)
developers won’t support a third platform
We’re not talking about a vastly different ecosystem. Probably Android-derived (which is open-source), very likely Linux derived. So compatibility is not going to be a huge issue, hence developing not hard. Developers will usually follow where user demand goes, not the other way around.
nor will customers move to a platform that doesn’t have the big apps that they need
Most of the big apps today have a smaller equivalent, check AlternativeTo.net.
Doubling your market share is easy when your market share is so low.
Generally true, but we’re talking a growth of millions of users a year. Millions of people is no small number. 5% of the US’ traffic are from Linux desktops, according to StatCounter (here’s an article with many links).
Nope, not in the tens of millions
You’re correct wrt. gaming, as 2.89% of 157 million active monthly users is about 4.55 million, which is not a small number either. If you look at Linux desktop users in the US however, we’re talking over 5% of 347 million, which is 17.35 million users in the US alone, which is also not a small number. It’s more than the population of Greece and Bulgaria combined.
Purely because of the steam deck (wrt. Steam Linux users growth)
Do you have numbers? I can’t find any official numbers of active users on the Steam Deck, but there are estimations of 3+ million devices sold. I feel like I keep seeing posts of people who move over to Bazzite and similar distros these days for the sake of playing games, but nevertheless, both of these factors weigh in, and are steadily increasing the adaptation of Linux systems.
without [kernel level anti-cheat] it will never take off because the overwhelmingly most played games all have kernel level anti-cheat.
This is denying the antecedent. The amount of games, and money in games, without KLAC is plenty substantial to make a difference in the approach of both developers and DRMs, further increasing ease of adaptation by users. Do not undermine nor underestimate the potential of marginalities.
The Windows phone entered the market while the market was stable, and users had little reason to move away from what they were used to and comfortable with. These days users are getting more uncomfortable, hence why Linux is on the rise. Same with the push for more liberal software (FOSS). I believe if a company can do it right, and offer a stable and comfortable alternative, they can manage to be much more successful than the Windows phone was 10 - 15 years ago.
Disclaimer: I haven’t checked the statistics, but I remain optimistic, and continue making choices that align with my principles.
Availability in the US might be a bit of a challenge, as the Google/Apple duopoly has solidified greatly over the years there. Europe has the entire BoycottUS movement these days, so there are a lot of attempts at developing something independent there. But as with most new solutions, they have the added difficulty of being compared to these bigger companies who’ve already had many years to develop and perfect their solutions.
The choice boils down to how much you value your principles over comforts, and whether downgrading to physical cards is worth it. Personally I’ve recently done just that.
In regards to Android clones becoming worse, I saw GrapheneOS say on Mastodon that it won’t affect them in any significant way. Hopefully this is the case for most, and will remain the case.
Not a lot currently, but what’s needed is for the snowball to start rolling. This means the early adopters will have to make the more difficult decision of choosing “lesser” options wrt. comfort and convenience, compatibility, and bang for your buck. All decisions matter, and it will have long-term effects en masse.
[Meta] This is a great high-quality comment with proper references! I personally really appreciate the effort of elaborating on media articles that are often sensationalist or clickbaity. Keep up the good work!