At the time vi was originally developed, such keyboards did exist (on terminals). That’s the reason it works the way it does.
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since interface has been designed to be as unfriendly as possible
No, it hasn’t.
It (well, vi, which vim is a clone of) has been designed to be a possible interface on a keyboard that doesn’t have arrow keys or other modifier keys than shift. There aren’t that many ways to program a visual text editor when those are your constraints.
That it’s more productive once you know it is a side-effect.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Maybe the fr*nch aren't so bad after all
321·10 days agoIt’s a fairly widespread Internet meme, I think in order to make fun of France, though I’m not sure exactly where it originated.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.ml•How many products does Microsoft have named ‘Copilot’? I mapped every one
4·17 days agoSee also: Windows Live, Surface, 365
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@beehaw.org•Fewer people posting on social media, Ofcom finds
1·18 days agoI actually dislike the term “social media” in the first place, only used it above for convenience…
I (seriously) discovered that there were websites that allowed the general public to participate in the mid-2000s when I was a preteen. I immediately liked that concept and started to participate on such sites (first forums, later wikis) myself and found that fun.
Then around 2008, everyone started to insist that such sites were now called “social media” and the most important ones were Facebook and Twitter, both of which I hadn’t heard of until around that time, and both of which didn’t seem like very fun or appealing places at all.
Now I keep hearing about the horrible things apparently caused by “social media” and wonder, what do you even mean, what could possibly be wrong with web forums.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@beehaw.org•Fewer people posting on social media, Ofcom finds
61·19 days agoHurray! People stop doing stupid shit!
you certainly have a high opinion of your own activities, eh?
I agree that the kind of “social media” that is popular among the general public (i.e. sharing information about one’s own life) is fairly stupid. But Lemmy too is “social media”, any support forum is “social media”, even wikis are “social media”, and I do not think that those are stupid things to do, at all.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@programming.dev•"FOSS" and "GNU Linux" do *not* automatically mean "for the community" or "for human rights"
6·24 days agoThere are many more examples of this here: https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/programs-must-not-limit-freedom-to-run.html
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@programming.dev•"FOSS" and "GNU Linux" do *not* automatically mean "for the community" or "for human rights"
32·24 days agoThe problem is that “human freedom” and “human rights” are very general and somewhat vague terms and some people’s freedoms and rights are sometimes in conflict with each other. So it’s also often meaningless to say that you support “human freedom” and “human rights” without asking what freedoms and rights and for whom.
FOSS is a very specific subset of human freedom and human rights, it’s the right to control, modify and distribute the software one uses. All other parts of human freedom and human rights aren’t something that the free software movement necessarily has a position on. (Free software can certainly be used to, at least arguably, violate human rights, for example armed forces can use free software too, and should be able to!)
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Pokémon@lemmy.ml•Having rock and ground type always annoyed me.
3·28 days agodragon vs. fire (dragons are literally best known for producing fire) and dark vs. ghost (ghosts seem like creatures that have a lot to do with darkness) bothered me more tbh
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@beehaw.org•Age checks creep into Linux as systemd gets a DOB field
4·28 days agoSo you’re agreeing with me that this was supported by both parties…?
(I’m actually Austrian, not German; I have however read enough about US politics that I’m fairly confident in my statement above.)
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@beehaw.org•Age checks creep into Linux as systemd gets a DOB field
7·28 days agoGaruda Linux will not implement any age verification measures, since Garuda Linux’s legal jurisdictions have no laws mandating age verification.
Yes. That’s how it should be, that on the Internet you only have to comply with laws where you or the servers you are hosting things on are based, and all other places can piss off when it comes to enforcing their laws.
And it’s how it mostly used to work, but we now live in this world: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrest_and_indictment_of_Pavel_Durov
One of my childhood dreams was to run my own successful web forum. Now that we live in this world where that means countries might prosecute me because my users have been doing things that are illegal somewhere in the world, that dream is officially dead. >:(
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@beehaw.org•Age checks creep into Linux as systemd gets a DOB field
10·28 days agoThe big deal is that it’s on the heels of age verification bullshit that fascists are pushing through with the help of tech bros, so that they can eventually push all of us into a scenario where we have zero privacy.
That’s a bit difficult to argue in a world where the most prominent of such laws was passed in California, where Democrats control the entire legislative process.
I have not looked up the voting record for it, but would suspect that, like most of the worst laws in the US, it was enthusiastically supported by both parties? Am I wrong about that?
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.ml•Germany has shown the way forward by making OpenDocument Format (ODF) mandatory as the standard format for office documents
5·30 days agoI thought I’d read somewhere that in Germany, the regional governments do most of the heavy lifting in terms of legislation, with a very limited federal government
The federal government in Germany certainly has more legislative power (in comparison to state governments) than that of the US.
The thing about Germany is that in Germany, there are many areas where federal laws are enforced by state executive branches, which isn’t really a thing in the US.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•You're missing at least five
35·30 days agoYes, you did: OpenID.
I remember when I first read about it (late 2000s? not sure when), I thought it was an awesome idea and surely the web of the future would be full of “log in with OpenID” buttons.
Instead it is now full of “log in with Google”, “log in with Facebook”, “log in with Microsoft” buttons.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•A Counter-View on the Age Verification Law
151·1 month agoThe harm this law aims to address is grave and real. For the 99% of the population who aren’t compiling their own kernels, the ability to “age-lock” a child account to prevent young children from accessing doomscroll brainrot on Instagram is an amazing and valuable feature.
I disagree even with this premise. I reject the idea that it’s legitimate to want to keep young people from seeing, watching, reading things that they actively want to see/watch/read simply because we have a vague idea that “it’s not good for them”.
My parents too unfortunately agreed with your idea, and I remember being a (teenaged) minor and worried that my parents might find out too much about what I’ve been reading and doing on the Internet and punish me for it, I don’t wish that on anyone who happened to be born after me. I hereby resolve that if I ever have children, they will not have to worry about this. I think it is a very good thing that modern technology makes it somewhat harder for parents to oppress their children in such a manner.
But there’s nothing inherently wrong with OS developers implementing such a feature if that is what their customers want. There’s a lot wrong with the government mandating it.
The principled “linux source code is free-speech, and no government mandates can compel changes” stance is quite divorced from reality.
No, it’s an exactly correct legal analysis; at least morally, and should be legally.
Are crypto-exchange founders likewise free to implement whatever fraudulent schemes they like, as their source code is their speech to freely dictate?
I’m not sure what scenario you have in mind. Distributing software (even software that can be used for illegal activities) is free speech. Running and using software isn’t (automatically) speech, it’s an action that can be declared to be criminal. Anyone can use Thunderbird to send phishing emails, but it would be absurd to prosecute the developers of Thunderbird for that.
I agree with the idea that a user account with an age field is less bad than actual (biometric or ID-based) age verification.
The rest of your post is so full of meaningless buzzwords that it’s impossible to write anything coherent about it.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
6·1 month agoWith chat control we actually have to distinguish two different things that people sometimes confuse:
- voluntary chat control (“chat control 1.0”), which is currently already the law in the EU
- mandatory chat control (“chat control 2.0”), proposed in 2022
Voluntary chat control is about letting operators of communication services voluntarily scan messages for certain illegal activity (without this constituting a violation of data protection laws). This doesn’t break encryption and isn’t a part of a war on general purpose computing. While there are many good arguments against it, it’s not especially catastrophic. It’s a detail of business regulation.
Mandatory chat control is about forcing them to do so, which must necessarily break encryption and impose limits on software freedom. This is what is most important to oppose.
The most recent win ended up rejecting even (most) voluntary chat control, which is a good sign that mandatory chat control won’t get a majority either.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
16·1 month agoYes; recent news have made me somewhat optimistic that the resistance to it is winning though.
Age verification laws currently look like a much greater danger to freedom.
schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•The Engineer Who Tried to Put Age Verification Into Linux
63·1 month ago2000s: war on general purpose computing because of copyright
2020s: war on general purpose computing because of child protection
In the 2000s the forces of freedom mostly won, e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Broadband_and_Digital_Television_Promotion_Act didn’t become law. So far it seems that we are currently losing. :(
Confusing because there is a DB client called SQuirreL.
But also relevant xkcd: https://xkcd.com/1989/



As long as Google is doing a better job maintaining AOSP than a nonprofit would, what’s the point?
If they ever stop doing so, then this might be an option.