A 50-something French dude that’s old enough to think blogs are still cool, if not cooler than ever. Also, I like to write and to sketch.
https://thefoolwithapen.com/

  • 36 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 26th, 2023

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  • I think the internet has a lot of potential

    I only mentioned social media apps, not the Internet which is much older (I started using BBS in the early 80s and my first web browser was Mosaic). So yeah, the Internet has the potential, and always had. Not sure it will have for much longer though but that’s another question.

    The issue is that for more and more people ‘the Internet’ is nothing but an empty space in which they can find their ‘app of choice’ or their service of choice. And they have no idea there is a thriving world that is well-alive outside of those walled gardens Including the many remaining blogs—like mine, which is tiny, and so many others. A lot of blogs are and non corporate owned websites also try to monetize their content, though, but many, like mine, do not.

    Edit: clicked publish too quickly, added the rest of my reply.


  • How do we consume less content and be more social/productive in a way that isn’t concerned with profit?

    I’m not sure to understand what you mean?

    We consume less by doing more. Say, we watch less YouTube about what we want to do and start doing more of what it is we want to do.

    And we’re less concerned by profit the moment we start doing stuff or going more toward people (spending time with them) without expecting much if anything in return beside enjoying their company and/or enjoying doing that stuff we are doing. Without expecting to be paid anything in return.

    As far as being more productive, I’m not sure to understand what you mean either but, here again, doing more is a fine starting point.

    It’s consumerism that wants us to believe we need to endlessly consume (aka spend more money and time) to do stuff. We don’t.

    Well, yes, we do need to consume a little resources and we also need to feed/teach our head (ideas as well as art don’t come out of nowhere), but we certainly don’t need to constantly be stuffing ourselves with new content or tools—think obesity, but for the mind.

    So, if we want to be able to do interesting stuff on our own. We start by learning to do (interesting) stuff. Aka, by doing crappy stuff. And that’s true for every single things we may wish to do.

    Or, should we consume more content that is conducive to being social? What type of content would that be?

    We don’t need to consume any content to be social. But here again maybe I don’t understand the question, what would be a type of ‘content conducive to being social’?

    BTW, our species have existed (aka being social) for million of years, meanwhile Twitter/X and the others have existed since around 2005. So, we clearly don’t need them to be ourselves but they absolutely need and want us to think otherwise so they can sell us more ads and make more money.



  • As an Infomaniak user myself, I don’t feel much need to complain or to ask for help but I would not mind a community where people can discuss ideas, tips & tricks and why not, ask for help. Maybe all what’s needed for this to happen is someone to start doing it?

    So, if you feel like it, don’t be afraid to start such a community. Worse case, it won’t get much traction and no harm will be done. Best case, you maybe surprised to realize a few people were looking for exactly that ;)




  • any experience or advice on which is best

    Depends a lot what you want to with it, aka where you will ‘walk around’ with your camera ;)

    And also it depends a lot how you like to take pictures, and what is your level of expertise.

    I’ve quit photography almost completely (I’m sketching now) but was mostly doing street and wildlife. The last camera I ever purchased was an used OM-d 5 MK II (I would have to get it out of the closet to be sure of the exact model, the one that’s weather-sealed but not top of the line from 2015 or 2016) and I could not be happier. It was to the point that I stopped being interested in new gear.

    (for context: I have been using almost anything you can think of since the late 70s, from your standard 35mm to large format chambers, from fully automatic cameras to full manual ones with nothing but the sunny 16 (not even a portable light-meter). And I started fiddling with digital starting in the late 90s)

    Yeah:

    • Lightweight and not bulky. Those two things alone make it a blessing if you carry the camera all day long on the streets, and even more so when hiking in the wilderness.
    • Edit: It’s also much less intrusive than a bulky DSLR for street. And a tad less of a thieve magnet than, say, a Leica.
    • Image stabilization works great.
    • Fully articulated screen is so useful in so many situations.
    • Silent (if you want it to be).
    • Excellent lenses. Even basic kit lenses are decent (unlike so many other brands kit lenses). I mean they’re not amazing but anyone should be able to use the 14-42 from Olympus or from Panasonic and get decent shots. Which is great considering how cheap they can be found used. Much better lenses will be, well, much better but it’s hard to beat the 14-42 price used (I paid something like 25€ for the first one I got, and got a second one new for free by someone that refused to use nothing but the most expensive lenses to take snapshots (which was more than by me). Not my favorite lens by any means but one I would never hesitate to pick in many common situations.
    • Very niche, but this OM camera has a very usable focus stacking mode.
    • Did I mention it was so fucking not bulky with great image quality (given enough light)?
    • Edit: dirt cheap, used.

    BTW, I also own a Lumix GH5 that I mostly use(d) for video. It’s great for that but I prefer the OM for photography.

    Meh:

    • Poor low light perfs compared to larger sensors. I never cared that much about my images being noisier I cared a lot more about my gear being too bulky and too heavy to easily carry around ;)
    • In-lens stabilization doesn’t work between Lumix<>Olympus (depending the type of photos, it will work wonder within each specific brand) but the in camera does work cross-brands.
    • Weak battery life. I carried 2 spares on a standard day, to be on the safe side. Still less than the 4 I used to carry with my Fuji X100 and the 6 or 8 I had to carry with the now long forgotten but still beloved Epson RD-1s.
    • Menus are a mess. It’s even worse with the Olympus than with the Pana but one gets used to them and since one seldom need to access more than handful of those menus. Plus, all buttons are configurable for quick access to whatever you often use.

  • I don’t know.

    If we were honest, it’s the thing we should all be saying and hearing all day long. But it’s not. Quite the opposite, it’s among the rarest. Instead, people are shooting their certainties at one another, relentlessly.

    Not knowing something or not having an opinion on a question is not an issue. It’s to be expected, even if we were all geniuses (I’m certainly not one). Not doing the work to inform oneself could potentially be an issue but should not be as long we don’t pretend otherwise. It’s when one pretends to know, based on what one has heard someone else say, or because one wants to push a specific narrative that suits them, that shit starts hitting the fan. That’s when living together turn into the stinking shit hole it has turned into in which lies are fine (when they’re not adored) and facts have become suspicious if not dangerous.

    Obviously, I don’t know what I’m talking about.


  • Libb@jlai.lutoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    6 days ago

    To be precise about France, only polygamous weddings are forbidden but being polygamous without being wedded is not illegal.

    True that, but those persons still lack any legal status, unlike married or 'pacs’ed couples. I mean legally, in such a, err, cluster of person would be considered the head of the family and no one would be able to take medical decision for the others if they needed (they aren’t considered ‘family’) and no could inherit from the other(s) I mean not tax-free like in a standard couple. And the moment they’ve kids… Things can become real hairy. Edit: well, exactly like you mentioned already (I should have read the entire comment :p) but the point is that they would lack any legal status (like up until recently homosexual couples up until recently would have lacked one as they could not get married or pacsed).

    Would it be frowned upon?

    At the very least, feminists (young as well as old ones) would frown upon that. And I think most people would look down on it, even if they may not be openly hostile.


  • Libb@jlai.lutoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    6 days ago

    Like already suggested, it’s historical an cultural.

    I mean, your dad and you may be fine with polygamy but would you be as cool with, say, polyandry (mutliple husbands for a single woman)? If not, why? And what about monogamy or even not being married and practicing ‘free’ sex (partners mating and then splitting freely, willingly)? Or celibacy edit: chastity/abstinence of sex?

    Those are all cultural/historical/societal values. Some of those values are closer to our own personal values. Others are definitely not. Some are at the complete opposite of the spectrum of one another. But they’re still all based on principles, values, and on traditions that each group, if not all, will dearly defend and argue is the better choice if not the only ‘true’ one. I’m thinking hard but I can’t recall any noticeable group that welcomed ‘alien’ sexual/marital practice.

    Heck, even our good old own hippies of the 60s and 70s, with their ‘free’ or liberated sex and love were still openly hostile and quite dismissive to the traditional ‘married couple’.

    All questions related to sexuality/relationships and attribution of power (things like who is head of the family, who should be allowed to get specific kind of jobs (say, be a priest), the age of consent and the gender of partners, the type of sexual practice that are frowned upon, the (un)willingness to have sex, and so on) are among those core values that hardly any group of population is willing to discuss. At least not their own values because, based on what I can see, most of them seem to be more than willing to openly question any other group’s values.


  • I think I like the idea but shouldn’t we worry it would make it harder to use? I mean, people are lazy… if they are forced to hesitate each time they want to vote for a post or a comment, they’ll simply find a shortcut which probably means they’ll go for the biggest/first button they can click. Something like that.

    Also, I’m not sure vote will really change any deep trend (which by the way is one of the reasons I steered away from other social media). If people really want to share memes and low effort content can we really prevent it?




  • Pareil pour moi, d’ailleurs: zero souci.

    Même mes Airpods marchent du premier pocup sous Mint (c’est d’ailleurs pour cette raison incroyablement essentielle que je me suis décidé à switycher à Mint: j’arrivais pas à connecter mes Airpods avec les autres distros… Comme quoi j’ai des exigences dans la vie). Depuis, je suis vraiment tombé sous le charme de Mint, faut pas croire que je suis que superficiel comme ça ;)

    Par contre, j’ai jamais aimé BT et je l’aimerais jamais. Même quand j’étais sur un Mac.




  • Je ne cherche pas à blâmer. J’observe juste comment ça impacte ma capacité à faire des choses ou, plus justement, comment ça me contraint à faire des choses que je n’ai aucune envie de faire et, surtout à mon âge et malade, pas très envie d’y consacrer du temps non plus.

    Cela ne remet pas en cause ma reconnaissance envers le Logiciel Libre et ses auteurs. Comme je l’explique dans le blog, cela souligne surtout une des raisons dans ma distanciation d’avec la high-tech informatique, libre ou pas: les frictions imposées. Apple avait aussi des bugs pénibles et là, pour le coup, si les probabilités que Apple se soucie de mes signalements n’étaient pas nulles elles étaient quand même assez faibles… surtout ces 15 dernières années, où tout a profondément changé chez Apple.




  • Nice :)

    I used to own an Olympia SG1 (my grandad’s) that I loved to type on. It was a joy to use. I gave it to a friend when I switched full time to computer full time, in the late 80s. At first I thought nothing about it (it had done its time) but, say, around the early 00s I started realizing I missed it and I’ve been regretting it since then. For portable (the sg1 was heavy like a tank), I used to use a Lettera 22. Still, my true love was that Olympus ;)

    There are ways of keeping your data away from prying eyes

    I’m worrying both about the corporate greed and at the same time of that relentless trend in our elected representatives (and even more so in our non-elected bureaucracies), all to vote laws reducing or forbidding the use of true digital privacy protecting tools. Here in France for example, I would not be surprised if in a not too distant future things like Tor or VPNS or even the use of full non-backdoored encryption were to suddenly become illegal for the average Joe (except for people like, say, journalists, bankers, lawyers and other sensitive professions like that) all in the name of hunting naughty terrorists and perverts, obviously—not at all as a way to better control a rapidly growing percentage of unsatisfied population.