• 16 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I think Debian is close to new user friendly IF they pick Gnome or KDE with all the default stuff there, and has getting closer with non-free firmware enabled by default now, but still isn’t quite there as a plug and play new user friendly distro. Things like flatpak w/flathub or snap out of the box isn’t there, and it’d be hard to get a full Debian setup without using the command line (especially for a non free software zelot who wants Spotify and discord out of the box)

    Something like mint is just a tad easier, and that might be the different between an easy install and an unexpected set of hiccups that a new user might struggle with. The mint installer is also a lot more intuitive, at the cost of being less universally compatible (a big goal of Debian).







  • My understanding is that it’s not really the disrto, but the software running on it that’d effect battery life and performance. Both Debian and Arch can come pretty bare bones on a blank install (Ubuntu and derivatives tend to come with a fair bit of stuff bundled out of the box).

    I’d personally reccomend trying a Debian installation (I’d likely say use stable, but testing or sid are also options if you need quicker updates and don’t care for flatpak/snap/appimage/distrobox). The installer plays nice with Windows, and you can skip installing a desktop during installation then CLI install a tiling window manager to really minimize ‘bloat’.











  • I personally think AI has less of an effect on the tumultuous changes the web is going through. I think it’s really only the cherry on top, and the biggest cause IMO is the “infinite growth at the cost of infinite debt free and powered by ads paying 1/1000 of a $ per view” model collapsing.

    Sure AI putting out sludge content and using up server space might not be helping, but the web already might be fracturing and IMO it could turn out alright. A static blog can be hosted for free or extremely cheap, a small hosted community like a fediverse instance can be hosted for 3-5$, and more competition amongst the corporate sites (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube) is not a bad thing - and bonus points if people start following content from those services from within web wrappers or RSS instead of the official apps.

    And yeah, it wouldn’t be perfect (I know that these platforms have brought value to people, and I also know money is tight for a lot of people); but I don’t see the big services going away entirely either.