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crossroadsguy
Joined 3,196 karma

  1. Did you just call Charles Proxy a "hidden" gem? :)
  2. There are two things to note here:

    1. Pocket/etc is not even ancient history,

    2. At this point I don’t think Firefox or Mozilla ought to be taken without a truck of salt.

    A bonus third :D

    3. People bleeding their hearts out for Mozilla and calling others out for constantly criticising Mozilla — it’s history baby, history!

  3. And the gen-text-speak will conquer all with 'utlgng'.
  4. That for me has been Dropbox. It's not even a shadow of what it used to be as a sleek, perfect sync tool, but the competition is so bad and getting worse every day (along with Dropbox) that "Dropbox + Cryptomator" is literally the best option I still have. Tresorit seemed to come close, but it's bug-ridden and really sluggish, and their support is painfully useless.

    And as someone who has been in Apple's hardware ecosystem for more than a decade now (almost exclusively), I can't in my right mind bring myself to use any of its software/service products (and for good reasons, seeing it go bad to very bad to downright pathetic over the years) except for the OS because that's not really an option. Yes, I do have a small Cryptomator folder syncing to iCloud as well, but that's just because I wanted to have that as a backup sync, and it's a very tiny set of data that I anyway backup to elsewhere.

    The bad of it? Yes, keeping everything under one roof really feels simple and easy.

    The good? If Apple blocks my a/c today or nukes it, it will take a few hours to few days but I will get back everything single piece of data I have online on a new laptop or phone (Apple or Android or Windows or Linux) - everything! And it's a joy to use specific better/superior options for your software/service needs as per your specific choice!

  5. This is what I have been using for so many years after I deleted/lost my last.fm account. It keeps working like little magical tool in the background.

    I looked at libre.fm but I think all I ever saw was a waiting list.

  6. I would blame Apple, or Apple as well. For all their security and privacy circus they still don’t have granular settings like “directory specific permissions” i.e Discord wants to go bonkers? Here’s ~/Library/Discord - take a dump in it if that gets you off, Discord, but you can’t even take a sniff at how it smells in ~/Library/Dropbox and vice versa. I mean it should be setting that if set it’s directory access limit — it can’t change that with anything — in fact it shouldn’t be able to ask for permission to change that, it changes only when you go inside in the settings and change it or add or more paths to its access list.

    It should clearly ask for separate permissions if needs to have elevated access as in what it needs to do.

    Also what’s with password pop-ups on Macs? I find that unnerving. Those plain password entry pop-ups with zero info that just tells you an app needs to do something more serious - but what’s that serious thing you don’t know. You just enter your password (I guess sometimes Touch ID as well) and hope all is well. Hell not sure many of you know that pop-up is actually an OS pop-up and not that app or some other app trying to get your password in plaintext.

    They’d rather fuck you and the devs over with signing and notarising shenanigans for absolute control hiding behind safety while doing jack about it in reality.

    I am a mobile dev (so please know that I have written the above totally from an annoyed and confused, definitely not an expert, end user pov). But what I have mentioned above is too much to ask on a Mac/desktop? ie give an app specific, with well spelt limits, multiple separate permissions as it needs them — no more “enter the password in that nondescript popup and now the app can do everything everywhere or too many things in too many places” as it pleases. Maybe just remove the flow altogether where an app can even trigger that “enter password to allow me go on god or semi-god” mode.

  7. Yours is an absurd response. Rage-bait? Still, I will bite - kind of.

    1. You don’t need too much time to set this up.

    2. All this doesn’t have to be in one sitting - with meds and coffee that keeps you awake through the sleeping hours

    3. In fact it’s better if you do this over the weeks, months, years. For me it took years and I am still kind of doing it. Once in a while, here and there.

    4. I am not very smart. If I was I’d have just ignored your comment.

  8. For the similar reasons Apple sells socks.. maybe?
  9. > such as the $249 ISSEY MIYAKE knit sock

    I mean that is a problem in itself :D

  10. Not only local copies but also at least own and use one device where you have your important data that is not on the same OS ecosystem as the other device(s) - also helps with things like 2FA, password manager, etc., if shit has hit the ceiling fan on the other device.

    In addition, I always suggest people to:

    - Not use big tech's cloud services - ever

    - But if you must, do not use many cloud services from just one provider (i.e no Google everything, no iCloud everything) i.e stop using "one account gateways".

    - Needless to say, it's time you had a domain and start paying for mail hosting (at least for critical stuff - you can actually buy a very cheap plan; and use that gmail/live-hotmail/yahoo/iCloud/whatever everywhere else) [0]

    - Keep an offline (but safe) copy of your "most" important data [1] and ways to remember (i.e cryptic hints) for your "most" important passwords

    - Gain some experience in fighting in consumer courts/forums (depending upon your country) - start early, start with e-com companies. A lot many times we don't put up a fight because we have never done it before and we give up always because every time it's a first time. Apple and Google make a mockery of consumers everywhere because we have allowed them to. In fact sometimes when we talk of lack of accessible support at Google and Apple (yes, Apple) we speak in a disdainful appreciation or awe :)

    [0] Some might disagree but disabling (or dev/nulling in a way) mail@, hi@, contact@, sales@ etc on your domain (esp. if you have catch-all enabled) goes a long way in terms of avoiding spam

    [1] It's also very important to have a tiered approach to data storage and backup strategies. There should be a very, very, very small subset of your personal data, including some of your photos and videos, that is really, really small in storage footprint that you can back up/sync to multiple locations and actually pay the full price for it at storage costs via your own setup, preferably using FOSS tools (which are becoming too good these days) out there.

  11. I am not clicking on that link. Few stills of Grave of the Fireflies and I will have to place order for fresh tissue boxes.
  12. They have a Jelly Max https://www.unihertz.com/products/jelly-max and this looks too good to be true. I am sure one catch would be that it's not sold in my geography but still. Does it have at least few years of OS update support and more than few years of security updates?
  13. > but I've heard good things about NextDNS

    I have used them both paid and free and they are not good. I will pick just one point - support. It's pathetic. Maybe because it's non existent. I stopped paying for it, started using free, then removed it altogether.

    uBlock Origin really is that good as others are saying. I haven't really needed anything else. Ads in other apps? Well, that's a hit or miss but then a lot of my finance/investment related apps anyway don't work if I use any ad blocking on local network or device label, sadly. Tweaking around it is how I needed support with NextDNS and then realised I've been paying for something with essentially no support.

  14. I had iPhone 12 Mini and then 14 and now 17. I can't practically tell the difference except for battery life, weight, and size.
  15. Okay, this is the kind of post I have not read and will never read but I will still comment.

    Why Replicate is joining Cloudflare? Because you paid money to acquire it. Why the fuck else? Ffs.

  16. That'd be the textbook definition of hitting rock bottom, the last of the bottoms, and hitting rock bottom is a plan B in itself.
  17. Seeing it was advanced science, authorities wanted to add venues to encourage constant communication and collaboration. Always working for the people and the state! No time wasted.
  18. Just when you think you’ve seen all the corporate/business fuckery in this world. I already ask stuff like — is it a non-smoking room or not, do not use a strong room freshener when prepping the room (or better save money and skip freshener), etc. Now do I have to ask — whether your room has a bathroom door or not? Fucking hell! Hopefully, such fucked-up trends don’t reach this corner of the world at the speed and efficiency with which COVID did.
  19. I expect a lot of people saying trust. My reason is simpler - a browser is not like an email service, it's not like an IM, it's not like a social network, not that these as FOSS wouldn't be better, but a browser is literally the most fundamental end-user software to access the Internet and I don't want to bother spending even 10 mins to support another browser that is not FOSS. This sounds harsh but I am not shitting on Kagi or Orion. While I have not much positive views on Kagi Search either, I understand that and accept that and hence I acknowledge that, but the closed-source browser - nope! In some twisted way it feels like paying public taxes to build a private road. It's not a great analogy, I know, but that's the closest I could come to in terms of a connotation.

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