zdnet.com

BeatTakeshi , to Technology in Reddit's new paid ads look exactly like user posts
@BeatTakeshi@lemmy.world avatar

I like how they try to sell the idea that tricking users is in fact a nice and innovative way to advertise

ininewcrow , to Technology in Don't tell your AI anything personal, Google warns in new Gemini privacy notice
@ininewcrow@lemmy.ca avatar

Don't tell, share, give or allow access to anything personal to corporations

AI are children of corporations .... so don't give anything to the children of corporations

Boozilla , to Technology in Don't tell your AI anything personal, Google warns in new Gemini privacy notice
@Boozilla@lemmy.world avatar

On the one hand, this could be filed under "yeah, no shit, we all know stuff in the cloud is forever".

On the other hand, it's something that's easy to forget with the ubiquitous omnipresence of compute in our lives. We become numb to it, and everyone has moments of crisis or weakness where they may let their guard down.

The US needs better privacy and consumer protection laws. But we're always behind Europe, and way behind technology, when it comes to our crappy legal system.

rotopenguin , to Linux in How to create a bootable Linux USB drive
@rotopenguin@infosec.pub avatar

I would like to install a distro on a USB stick, without it doing something stupid to my internal drive's EFI.

Anarchistcowboy ,

I see people say this a lot and I have no experience with this but I wonder why you wouldn't use a USB nvme SSD enclosure it seems a lot easier and idk if running it over USB would limit the speed but it could preform better than a USB stick.

rotopenguin ,
@rotopenguin@infosec.pub avatar

A dumb little stick is fine for the occasional "fix something up" or "take a snapshot of a Windows drive because dd is objectively better than anything that Windows itself could do". A live iso distro precludes me from adding a handful of other useful tools.

Hule ,

"persistent storage" is a thing.

But USB drives can't endure standard Linux for long. Too many logs and other files written all the time..

Catsrules , to Linux in If all kernel bugs are security bugs, how do you keep your Linux safe?

Best way I found it running this command

rm -rf /

Then do a reboot just to be sure.

Good luck compromising my system after that.

FYI This is a joke Don't actually run this command :)

possiblylinux127 ,
@possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip avatar

sudo apt-get remove systemd (don't actually run this)

KindaABigDyl , to Linux in If all kernel bugs are security bugs, how do you keep your Linux safe?
@KindaABigDyl@programming.dev avatar

Great reason to push more code out of the kernel and into user land

kabi ,

Is it HURD'n' time?

OmnipotentEntity ,
@OmnipotentEntity@beehaw.org avatar
mexicancartel ,

Ah shit MIT license

EinfachUnersetzlich ,

Is that bad?

mexicancartel ,

It means anyone including microsoft or apple can use the code contribution or take the entire softwarw and make some modifications and sell it proprietary. Any optimisations or features made by community can be proprietarised

GreenMario , to Technology in Gen Z is ditching iPhones for $100 'feature phones,' and the numbers don't lie

Doubt.

Haven't seen a flip phone in use in ages and I work among the public. Even the barely functional elderly on smartphones.

Who paid for this article? What's their angle?

Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Just the other day I saw an article with the exact opposite headline about how Gen z is sticking with the iPhone. Now I don't know which one is full of shit; but it's obviously one of them.

GreenMario ,

Playing_both_sides.jpg

EnderWi99in , to Technology in Gen Z is ditching iPhones for $100 'feature phones,' and the numbers don't lie

This is a thing that isn't happening, at least not among Gen Z. What a bullshit article.

at_an_angle ,

As a millennial, the thought of ditching my smartphone is a thought that keeps coming up.

betternotbigger ,

I did it for 3 months. I really enjoyed my time doing it and learned a lot about my usage. It was a cheap $50 experiment. After I went back to my smartphone, I uninstalled ALL social media apps. Turned off ALL notifications but left calls and messages as an exception. My smartphone is now essentially a feature phone. It's not 100% the same since the big screen does lure you in to use it but my usage is still way down and because I don't have any social media there's no reason for me to be on my phone around other people. I wholeheartedly recommend trying it for those curious.

severien ,

That reminded me how a local wanna-be influencer did a smartphone detox for a week, immediately after the completion she posted an FB story: Part 1 - Reflection, how eyeopening the experience was, how much time she suddenly had for the things that truly matter etc. Subscribe to not miss the Part 2!

fin , to Linux in How to create a bootable Linux USB drive

Some people need everything to have a GUI. They evaporate as soon as they’re required to open the terminal.

DmMacniel ,

Isn't it cool that you only need to use the terminal when you really need it? Simple tasks as flashing an usb stick shouldnt require knowledge of the terminal.

fin ,

If you’re talking about me I didn’t say that I’m one of those. I love CLI and rather hate GUI.

theshatterstone54 ,

And that's why It's great to have choice. Also, if you start off in CLI, it can be quite overwhelming. The first time I had to partition my drive I was super scared not to mess it up. A few months later I knew exactly what I was doing.... when I was using a graphical installer or Gparted. Earlier today, I partitioned my drive using cfdisk (fdisk feels kinda painful; press this, then this, and if, like me, you don't know the commands by heart, it can take too long), and I installed Arch manually cuz I was bored. It was my first time doing a manual install with systemd-boot (always did grub in the past), so I didn't realise I had to write my own boot entries for all 3 kernels (mainline, zen and lts), and because of font issues, I just switched back to Fedora (going up a version from 39 to 40 in the process) where I had an issue with a qt component that meant my sddm theme was not working. It isn't the theme's fault, that's for sure, as it worked perfectly on Fedora 39 and elsewhere, and because pretty much all themes I could find relied on this qt module (it's qtgraphicaleffects, packaged as qt5-qtgraphicaleffects on Fedora) , I got a bit angry and then sat down and rewrote the theme, removing any dependency on graphicaleffects (was only used for drop shadows in some popups), though for some reason some of the colours also got a bit funky but it works and it works well (I also had to hide one of the popups but it wasn't an essential one).

But I digress. Point is, if it's more comfortable for you, you'll use it. If it isn't but you want it to be, then to ill force yourself to use and get better. If you don't, you just won't. That's the power of choice in Linux.

fin ,

For example, when you want to install desktop environments, you need to use CLI. There’s no GUI option. I guess that’s why Linux is considered “difficult” for Windows/MacOS users, while they can use Chromebook, which is also Linux.

The point of original post is how zdnet is trying to let people use Linux, right?

DmMacniel ,

No GUI option you say? Then why can I for example install Kde-full via mints app store? Or any Desktop meta package via Synaptic.

Also ChromeOS Is as much Linux as Android is. Barely.

Sylvartas ,

Good thing that the existence of a GUI for a program doesn't prevent you from using its CLI version then !

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