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Amikke boosted

We fundamentally need a new type of option: the ability to grant software privileges that are completely phony. I need to be able to *pretend* to grant an app the ability to send me notifications, but then to have all those notifications sent into the void. Untrustworthy software should not be able to know what privileges I have granted it.

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@freemo even so, pretty much any Chromium-based browser will be better than Chrome or Edge privacy-wise without sacrificing functionality. Including Vivaldi (which seems to be the one most recommended), Brave (which I use but some people boycott due to the founder's political views), ungoogled Chromium, probably Opera and whatever else is out there.

Amikke boosted

A few days ago, someone asked me in what way console gaming is seen as more regarded than PC gaming—and, in my view, undeservedly so.

Here’s an example. Do a search for a book about PC gaming, you won’t find much on Amazon. Sure, you’ll find lots of books on how to build a PC for gaming, but not a whole lot about actual PC gaming. You know, the games made for PC.

Theres lots of books about the history of Nintendo and PlayStation. But in terms of the history of PC gaming, not much is written.

And when it comes to a history of gaming in general, PC gaming gets a few mentions but not really a whole lot.

Because of this, an errant mythology is now believed about gaming as a whole. It goes something like this: Atari made video games popular. Then there was a video game crash. And then Nintendo “saved” gaming.

But that’s not exactly what happened.

In reality, there may have been a crash in the arcade and console gaming space, but not for PC. In the early 80s, the Apple II, Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit, and IBM exploded in popularity. And with it, interest in gaming too.

It wasn’t word processors and drawing apps that caused this explosion in growth. It was gaming. We all begged our parents to get a PC so we could do our homework. But in reality, we were using those machines to play Donkey Kong, King’s Quest, and Lode Runner.

Here’s what a lot of people don’t realize. In the early 80s, the console/PC divide wasn’t so cut and dry. A Colecovision was meant to morph into an Adam computer. A Commodore 64 could connect to your TV and could play cartridges. Even an NES had PC aspirations—in Japan “Famicom” was short for “family computer”.

It’s sad to say but the history of PC gaming is being forgotten. This is a damn shame because the majority of games have not been released for consoles. So many of them are still PC exclusive.

(Nowadays mobile gaming is becoming even more important.)

But this isn’t just about games. It’s about people. Yes, Shigeru Miyamoto is important to gaming history. But you know who is just as important?

Roberta Williams, the mother of PC gaming. She was the designer of King’s Quest, Laura Bow, and Phantasmagoria. You know what else she did? She co-founded Sierra.

And until the 90s, Sierra was the most important company in PC gaming. Its effects can still be felt today in the fact they published a little known game known as Half-Life—which gave Valve their own foothold in the industry, and subsequently, Steam.

More people need to know about folks like Roberta Williams. They made art that impacts nearly every person living on the planet today.

Amikke boosted

@icedquinn was additionally funny for me because the way he pronounces it is very similar to the Polish word "fiut", meaning cock.

@freemo my first Linux installation, something like Ubuntu 9. I wanted to have a better login screen so I installed a different display manager, which replaced the old one. I disliked it even more so I uninstalled it, assuming the system will return to the old one. It didn't.

Amikke boosted

@ricci @regehr every problem in cooking can be solved with one more layer of indirection

@centopus @Aleks_z_Gryfa nie doceniasz braku umiejętności przewidywania korposystemów. To że jeden miał takie zabezpieczenia nie znaczy że inny też ma xD
Nie żebym wątpił w to czy to jest stary fejk, widziałem też w wersji gdzie autorzy wiadomości to kolejno Bill Tchaikovsky i Ajami Erkson.

@kilroy_was_here @freemo airbag gives me flashback from "Is it a good idea to microwave this?" airbag episode

@mkljczk @wariat @matsafi@pol.social jak ktoś sobie zadał trud żeby zamknąć ekosystem i teraz będzie musiał sobie zadać trud żeby to odwrócić to dobrze mu tak. Gdyby tego nie robił od początku to zaoszczędziłby dwukrotnie. Poprawna analogia to nie zmuszanie do wymiany podzespołów na wydajniejsze tylko raczej zmuszanie dzbana co postawił mur na drodze do zburzenia go.

Nie martw się, na tym zamykaniu ekosystemu zarobili nieporównywalnie więcej niż takie odwracanie spierdolenia może kosztować.

@mkljczk @wariat @matsafi@pol.social różni się, tym że zamknięcie ekosystemu to aktywne działanie monopolistyczne, a nie zamykanie go dosłownie nic nie kosztuje i jest sytuacją domyślną.

@mkljczk @wariat @matsafi@pol.social zakaz monopolistycznego zamykania ekosystemu to "dobre rozwiązania do których konkurencja doszła sama"?

@piotrsikora wymagania na kierowcę: prawo jazdy kategorii D+Tramwaj, dobra tolerancja na Przyprawę

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