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tsonfeir , to Technology in I used an original iPod in 2024, and it was pretty fun
@tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

Well, it was fun back then. I’m guessing the author wasn’t alive.

Alto ,
@Alto@kbin.social avatar

There's plenty of tech from my younger days that was fun then that I wouldn't find fun now. An original iPod is not one of those.

tsonfeir ,
@tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

What is?

homesweethomeMrL ,

Those . . . balsawood airplanes? With the rubber band propellor?

tsonfeir ,
@tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

That sounds fun..

homesweethomeMrL ,
SatansMaggotyCumFart , to Technology in I used an original iPod in 2024, and it was pretty fun

I used a wheel today and that was invented in about 3500 BCE.

Rentlar ,

I need you to write an article detailing your experience. Most importantly I need to know if it was fun.

SatansMaggotyCumFart ,

I don't write shit for free so what's the pay?

Rentlar ,

Unfortunately I'm only rich in memes.

How about 1 month of Lemmy Premium?

SatansMaggotyCumFart ,

I don't whore myself out for Lemmy Premium anymore but if you have a couple Danny DeVito nudes I will write you whatever you want.

Rentlar ,
SatansMaggotyCumFart ,

The Joyful Journey: Finding Fun in the Humble Car Tire

In the realm of fun and recreation, the car tire might not be the first thing that comes to mind. Yet, in its simplicity lies a world of enjoyment waiting to be explored. From childhood games to creative DIY projects, the car tire has proven itself to be a versatile and endlessly entertaining object.

One of the most enduring uses of the car tire for fun is in outdoor games. Picture a group of children in a neighborhood, gathered around a worn-out tire lying on the ground. Suddenly, the tire becomes a portal to adventure as they engage in a game of tire rolling. With a simple push, the tire sets off, rolling down streets and alleys, chased eagerly by its young owners. The thrill of competition and the joy of movement unite in this timeless activity, fostering friendships and creating lasting memories.

Moreover, the car tire serves as a key component in many classic playground games. Who hasn't experienced the exhilaration of swinging on a tire swing, soaring through the air with the wind in your hair? The tire swing epitomizes the essence of carefree fun, offering a sense of freedom and weightlessness as it arcs back and forth. Similarly, tire obstacle courses challenge both physical agility and mental acuity, as participants navigate through a series of tires laid out on the ground, testing their speed and coordination.

Beyond structured games, the car tire also sparks creativity and innovation in DIY projects. In the hands of a skilled craftsman or artist, the tire transforms into a canvas for expression. From colorful tire planters adorning gardens to funky tire ottomans enhancing living spaces, the possibilities are as diverse as the imaginations that conceive them. Repurposing old tires not only reduces waste but also infuses a sense of whimsy and character into everyday surroundings.

Furthermore, the car tire's versatility extends to the realm of sports and fitness. Tire flipping, a popular exercise in strength training, challenges individuals to lift and flip heavy tires, building muscle and endurance in the process. Meanwhile, tire drag races offer a dynamic and engaging way to improve speed and agility, as participants sprint while pulling a weighted tire behind them. These unconventional workouts inject an element of playfulness into traditional fitness routines, motivating individuals to push their limits while having fun.

In addition to physical activities, the car tire lends itself to artistic pursuits, such as tire painting and sculpture. Artists around the world have embraced the tire as a medium for their creative visions, transforming ordinary rubber into extraordinary works of art. Whether adorned with intricate designs or repurposed into striking sculptures, these tire-based artworks captivate audiences with their ingenuity and craftsmanship.

In conclusion, the car tire may seem like a mundane object at first glance, but upon closer inspection, its potential for fun and enjoyment knows no bounds. From childhood games to DIY projects, from sports to art, the tire proves itself to be a source of endless amusement and inspiration. So, the next time you see a discarded tire lying by the roadside, don't overlook its potential for fun – seize the opportunity and embark on a journey of joyful exploration.

Rentlar ,

Thanks :)

mbirth ,

“I’ve slept in a tent last night and it was pretty fun”

randy , to Technology in Steam is a ticking time bomb

If you want a preview of an uncaring and anti-consumer Valve, look no further than the company's efforts on Mac.

Valve never updated any of its earlier games to run in 64-bit mode.... Apple dropped support for 32-bit applications in 2019

Funny enough, the only platform with a 64-bit Steam client is Mac.

I don't disagree with concerns about monopoly, but the author's key example is Macs. And from the example, it sounds to me like Apple disregards backwards compatibility (dropping 32-bit support, moving to ARM chips) and Valve isn't investing to keep up. Meanwhile, Windows has a heavy backwards-compatibility focus, and Linux isn't too bad either, so no wonder they still get Valve's attention. So who is being "anti-consumer" in this example, Valve or Apple?

corbin OP ,

It's a little bit of column A and a little bit of column B. Apple very obviously doesn't want the Mac gaming ecosystem to exist in the same capacity as Windows and Linux, but Valve also has an obligation to its customers using Macs to keep the service running well.

verdare ,

Yeah, Valve has put a lot of effort into bridging the compatibility gap for Linux. Most of that work could also be ported to macOS, but they just don’t care.

It’s a shame, because getting 32-bit to 64-bit compatibility working would help Linux as well. I don’t know how much longer distros want to keep supporting 32-bit libraries, and some distros have already dropped them.

That said, macOS compatibility seems like a non-sequitur for an article calling Steam a “time bomb.” DRM is definitely the bigger issue here.

Pantherina , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

Damn didnt know it was that bad.

They also lack any documentation about how to use their policies on Linux (where you can disable all the bloat). But it should be doable, I will give it another try.

Is the browser even FOSS? Can you compile a working version yourself?

I do that with Firefox and it is really cool.

Eggyhead , to Technology in The problem with standalone VR and "spatial computing"
@Eggyhead@kbin.social avatar

As someone who's been using apple devices for a long time, this pretty much summarizes one of my biggest concerns with the APV. The other being expensive, proprietary, and software-locked lens inserts. (Basically creating a proprietary tax for people with poor vision who want to be involved with spacial computing, antithetical to Apple's accessibility efforts.)

Ghostalmedia ,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

I haven’t seen anything about the lenses being software locked. Who has reported that?

That said - they are $100 to $150, which isn’t terrible as far as glasses go. There are a lot of weird things with the Vision Pro, but as a glasses wearer, that price range actually feels reasonable to me. That’s Warby Parker pricing.

cubism_pitta ,

I was hoping for free :( BUT $150 for Zeiss lenses is pretty ok price wise. (especially when we are complaining about $150 on top of a $3500 device)

Ghostalmedia ,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

I could wear contacts if I wanted to, but glasses look good on me and hide a scar that I have on my nose and eye. I keep thinking that I should probably just do a Drew Carey. Get contacts and put non prescription lenses in my frames.

Glasses can be an inconvenience with vr glasses, ski goggle, helmets, face masks, night driving, etc.

ripcord ,
@ripcord@lemmy.world avatar

Can you do laser correction? If so, that seems even better than the contacts situation.

IchNichtenLichten ,
@IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world avatar

LASIK is a great option, especially if you're younger. A lifetime of contacts and glasses adds up.

beefcat , to Technology in Stop using Opera Browser and Opera GX
@beefcat@beehaw.org avatar
floofloof , to Technology in You probably don't need a VPN

The title should be "You should understand what a VPN is for, before using one."

mateomaui , to Technology in You probably don't need a VPN

Spends most of article telling you why they probably aren’t necessary.

Ends with 4 examples why they’re useful, which are the main reasons they’re used to begin with.

HidingCat , to Technology in The Windows 11 problem

ITT: People who just read the headlines and not the article, and then going off on their own Windows rant/Linux evangelism instead of discussing the article.

riskable ,
@riskable@programming.dev avatar

I read the article! It suggests in a hundred different ways that Windows 11 sucks and that sticking it out with Windows 10 is a bad idea for a dozen different reasons.

The people here suggesting Linux nailed it. If you're not using Linux at this point you're just being lazy, IMHO. If you have any issues you can always just troubleshoot and fix it but based on the anecdotes posted so far it's obvious no one claiming to have tried Linux has done much of that.

Get off your ass and learn something new for real or stop bitching and bend over for Microsoft with your wallet ready to pay them afterwards for the privilege.

People bitching about Windows on their personal PCs is like people who don't vote bitching about politics.

massivefailure ,

If you’re not using Linux at this point you’re just being lazy

I used Linux for over twenty years and stopped about two years ago due to Linux invariably moving to lazy, poor development and design all the way from the kernel up. Rapid kernel development with tons of random new patches and ideas instead of the old way of maintaining a stable kernel and doing random patches and ideas on a separate branch (the odd minor versions vs. the stable even ones, and even the modern "stable" kernels are just the same branch of constantly rapid updated kernels where they just choose one at random and say "this is 'stable' now and we'll keep patching it instead of telling people to install new ones"), systemd being more of a problem than a solution, the push for everything to move to Wayland forcing every single thing that has to do with lower level desktop interfaces, including all of the lightweight window managers, to completely rewrite themselves with tons of bloat that replaces everything X.org did by default as well as Wayland's devs taking a "it works on my computer" approach to bugs and dismissing tons of major issues people have found, pipewire still not being a stable, reliable audio system (Linux has never had one, but using ALSA with the right hardware back in the day where everything would mix via hardware was a decent solution), distros becoming more and more unreliable and buggy (even "stable" and "long term support" ones), distros and developers giving up on native and running bare metal applications and substituting things like flatpak to run things natively with any sort of cross-platform reliability and fucking wine -- essentially a new version of Windows running in Linux, which is an admission of failure to make a successful game platform if I've ever heard one -- to run games, and on and on.

I've been able to use Linux very well until a few years back. I used to be one of its biggest advocates and wouldn't dare run Windows.

No more. People bitch, moan, and complain about Windows 11 so much but for me, it just works. Simply, easily, no problem. Do I wish I still used Linux? Hell, yes. But am I given how bad it's become? Nope. I've even tried going back here and there and quickly ran into the same huge list of problems and aches that were never there before and back to Windows I go.

Sorry, Linux is a pain and it's not about being lazy, it's about wanting to use a decent OS that just works as well as Linux used to.

hperrin ,

I’ve been using Linux since 2008, and yours and my experience is basically opposite. I stayed on X until about a year ago, and haven’t had any problems with Wayland. PipeWire was basically immediately better as soon as Fedora switched to it. I could use Jack plugins and patch bays with my pulse apps, including all the electron apps, like Discord. Systemd has always been better than sys5 init. Maybe you don’t remember how bad the old init daemon was.

I’m sorry you had trouble with Linux though.

massivefailure ,

I remember the old initd. It was fast, efficient, didn't hang up for 10+ minutes when it got confused about what needed to shut down when, and just worked until a bunch of impatient new Linux users wanted to get to the desktop in 0.00007 seconds and couldn't patiently wait for a proper init boot order so they created this bloated monstrosity. But those aren't even the worst part of NuLinux: to this day Wayland is absolute unstable garbage not worth using. Visual glitches, UI glitches, instability, slowdowns, and outright crashes that even REISUB can't recover from. Meanwhile, Xorg still Just Works.

Modern Linux is garbage and needs to be either fixed or thrown away.

dantheclamman OP , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser
@dantheclamman@lemmy.world avatar

Today I learned that people take it VERY PERSONALLY when you criticize their chosen browser. 😂

dexahtm , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

I thought it was nice that maybe a private browser would be mainstream but then on second thought.... Something icky must be going on if it's mainstream, i mean the whole crypto part was an instant warning for me. Proud Librewolf user over here!!!

alvanrahimli , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

Unfortunately, there are the ame stuff about Firefox too. Mozilla Foundation is such a corrupt organization with extreme shady finances.

Foundation's main income is royalties by google: 567M per year.

Donations: 7M (which almost goes to the CEO's bonuses)

the CEO gets 700K salary and 4.6M bonuses. Lmao.

I'd suggest, using Firefox but not donating to them.

prosp3kt ,

I come from the future, now CEO's salary is almost 9M.

stooovie , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

I have absolutely no idea how Brave got the reputation it has. It's business model is disgusting and extortionate, it's like paying for warez. Been clear as day since day one.

DogMuffins ,

it's got crypto.

DauntingFlamingo ,

It's got electrolytes!

Necromnomicon ,

It has what plants crave!

AA5B ,

It’s what plants crave!

phej ,

A big reason to avoid it!

blue_zephyr , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

The fact that their founder wants to ban gay marriage is enough reason for me to avoid it like the plague.

JehovasThickness ,

He fucking what?

blue_zephyr ,

He made a thousand dollar donation in support of proposition 8, a constitutional amendment in California that strips gay people of the right to marry. He then proceeded to argue that such a donation does not make him a bigot or an enemy of LGBTQ+ people, because he's a delusional piece of filth.

This effectively prevented gay people from marrying in California from 2008 to 2013 until the fascists that supported it were finally done trying to argue how this doesn't violate the US constitution.

So yeah, may he, his browser, and any pathethic excuse that pretends to be human being who supported this abomination rot in the deepest depths forever.

arc , to Technology in Why you shouldn't use Brave Browser

Brave is a marching band of red flags. It claims privacy while injecting ads, affiliate codes and crypto into the browser. It's kind of sad to see someone like Brendan Eich who should know better turn to the dark side and pretend this is all fine. It isn't.

Best advice I could give for anyone who wants privacy is use Firefox or a branch of it. Firefox is out of the box the most privacy conscious mainstream browser and add-ons make it more so. If you want absolute privacy you could even use a derivative like Tor Browser.

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