Mama told me not to come.

She said, that ain’t the way to have fun.

  • 3 Posts
  • 4.22K Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 11th, 2023

help-circle





  • I’m the same way. I thought websites were cool and wanted to make one. So I did and taught myself. Then I took a class at my high school, then again at the local community college once I could do concurrent enrollment. In college, I worked on software projects to relax from my CS classes, and I still do that today.

    Even if AI takes my job, I’ll probably still hack on stuff. I’m in it because I love software dev. I probably could’ve climbed the ladder long ago, but that would’ve required sacrificing what I want to do.

    So yeah, hopefully I can keep making money with my hobby, but I’m not interested in becoming a corporate hack just to make a buck.









  • Linux is like the “I own an old hotrod in my garage and work on it as a hobby” compared to “I drive a cheap commuter car and just want it to work”

    Really?

    Linux gives you choice, sure, but it doesn’t just randomly break unless you’re doing something exotic.

    Garuda Linux

    There’s your problem, you’re using a bleeding edge distro, which is like having a hotrod.

    If you want a boring commuter, install a boring commuter distro, like Debian. If you want something fresher, there are a lot of options before you get to Arch-based distros, like Fedora. Stick to the most popular distros and you probably won’t have problems.

    Don’t get me wrong, Arch can be fantastic, I ran it for several years with minimal problems, but you really do need to be ready to step in and get your hands dirty.

    My main advice is to go in expecting to need to replace software. A lot of stuff works (e.g. discord, Steam, etc), but a lot of stuff doesn’t. If you’re flexible, use a mainstream distro, and stick to what’s available in the repo or on flathub, it’ll probably be more stable than Windows. Just don’t expect your random RGB app or whatever to work, and be ready to swap some POS hardware if the manufacturer doesn’t support Linux (e.g. certain WiFi vendors that aren’t Intel).

    Also, don’t expect Linux to make things faster, you’re still limited by your hardware. But do expect common tasks to work well.





  • requiring Google (and Facebook) to spin off their ad network businesses

    That is their business. Everything else exists to bring more value to that business:

    • AOSP - ads in the browser (search engine) and app store
    • Chrome - ads in the search engine, and nudge people toward other Google products to hoover up data to serve more ads

    And so on. Google and Meta are ad companies that drive traffic to their ads through software services.

    The point in forcing them out of certain businesses is to open them up to more competition. They can keep ad margins high due to sheer volume of eyeballs coming from their other services. Gutting those services means they need to provide better value to stay competitive.

    Idk if it’ll work, but stripping out the browser is likely good overall for the open web.