If systems begin to drop support for the previous technology you run into incompatibility problems across the board
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I’ve had Linux pop OS on a USB and ran it for about a year and a half total before switching on and off to windows. I think it’s one of the few OSes that actually work on all my devices even obscure thinkpads. I’d still use it today however -
My issues with Linux as a whole stem from absolutely trash antivirus and auditing perspective. Windows suffers this in many ways but I think they’re a live service rather than a static service. I’ll give an example, we’re getting bitlocker encryption with backup support keys etc in case a user gets locked out of a device on all devices very soon in W11h24 I believe, as a default. Pop OS comes with disk encryption but if I forgot my password or what have you, or even want to make a USB encryption key to unlock the device if I forgot it, I’d be in trouble. There’s an element of user friendliness that OSX and Windows have, that Linux just doesn’t have. I get scared running these open source applications when we’re essentially in a Cold War and I need to depend on them for my business. Especially if the apps are developed in JavaScript there’s so many dependencies I can’t verify. I can use portmaster and some log trailing to sift it but something about it feels like I am still not secure.
Between this and the pip install break all system packages
This has to be about the dumbest change I could possibly gather in the last 20 years of computing. I can’t even imagine breaking this many things all at once. I’m still dealing with the side effects of people’s installers from docker-compose and the pip problems - ansible will just never be the same again. Now this.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your VPN provider won't go to jail for you for 5 dollars
1·2 years agoI worked directly for one of the two biggest log and search systems for big data for years and I can tell you that there is always a way to correlate data lol. And the data you don’t have you can always buy to help put the missing pieces together.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your VPN provider won't go to jail for you for 5 dollars
1·2 years agoIf your data is being collected then are you really private or anonymous? I can think of a lot you can infer simply from metrics in a client, time window of connection and a few metrics. That’s just removed.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your VPN provider won't go to jail for you for 5 dollars
12·2 years agoThat’s not true. We used to collect client and server data both to detect issues and even if it was only in a subset of customers there is just some customer facing QoS issues you wouldn’t find unless you were collecting data, that wouldn’t be found on server side for example. Like let’s say iPhones make an update and you’re doing video streaming, maybe certain video formats would lag when streaming to the player but not on an android or vice versa.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your VPN provider won't go to jail for you for 5 dollars
41·2 years agoWondering how these magicians measure quality of service then, since they collect no juicy data. I find this hard to believe.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Will antivirus be more significant on Linux desktop after this xz-util backdoor?
1·2 years agoTry portmaster it’s open source. It might not be perfect in UI but I believe that’s what I used last time on Linux.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Will antivirus be more significant on Linux desktop after this xz-util backdoor?
12·2 years agoI find all this “bog down your system” answers to be a crock of shit. Go run ESET nod32 and put it in interactive mode. Yes, you’ll get a lot of prompts but damn you’ll learn so much about what’s going on in your computer and the networks it’s reaching out to. If you’re on windows run glass wire or OSX run little snitch. I used to know a Linux alternative for those but the point stands that you should have tools that you can use in a desktop setting to really understand what is running, and what it’s connecting to. You should have a program running that can check against a database of hashes of files for signature matches. It seems though like there’s not strong enough AV. And I suspect that’s on purpose so state actors can easily get into our systems in all nations.
When you go just ask if there’s cars or models without the car itself having a SIM card but that still has carplay. People love to drum this stuff up but they still make dumb cars. There’s usually like 3 variations maybe 4 of each model. Go lower on the model to get less features but still the right amount of them.
Having my lights turn off from a voice control is really useful when I want to take a nap but I found that it was weird having all this shit tied into a strangers cloud (google, amazon, apple, whatever). If its hosted at home its usually just fine. As long as ET doesn’t phone home.
Can I be ridiculous here and say that a nook e-reader or kobo e-reader, and a steamdeck would suffice?
Maybe just a kobo?
I know it’s not Linux and that’s what you asked for, but at the end of 2022 when I looked into this I had a hard time finding Linux tablet with a good UX.
spaphy@lemmy.mlto
Environment@beehaw.org•A look back at U.S. climate solutions this year
1·2 years agoSomeone I’m close with ran their EV company on diesel fuel this year. Tesla uses grid power. I’d say even the most ambitious projects have been a scam in green energy.
Hell in the US you can buy and sell solar energy credits from companies that actually have solar usage, which then allows you to make claims about how green your company is.

Lick my sack