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2 yr. ago

  • One question I have about the cube is will it be capable of doing full DRM streaming services like Netflix? Most living room systems have that, but doing it on an open linux system somehow would be novel.

  • Noto (Google) I thought was the most well-known.

  • The ban happened because Verizon was trying to sell it.

  • The article does mention this problem and they claim to have been able to pull it off somehow.

    “Mammalian cells are orders of magnitude more sensitive than algae cells, but even with those cells, we were able to detach them with no impact to the viability of the cell,” Vandereydt says.

  • Not certain Sony counts as worldwide anymore since they seem to have retreated from the US.

  • I'm sure what I'm about to say has already been echoed by others, but there are a few factors working against them. This is from a US/Canada perspective. Other countries may have more or fewer barriers.

    1. Mobile hardware - Mobile hardware has higher security. Some of this is by design for the user, since mobile devices are more likely to fall into wrong hands than e.g. a desktop. Some of it is corps preventing users from using their hardware in ways they don't want you to, though. The level of locked down mobile hardware has only increased over time.
    2. Carriers - This one is particular to North America, I think. Carriers here have a long history of meddling in phone hardware - from bloatware to SIM locks and everything in between. One of the things they do since LTE is require device makers to pay them to get certified to make calls on their network. Linux capable devices are too niche to be able to afford this. This is why Fairphone, for example, even with its Android-based OS, only works on one carrier here.

    Those are the main two barriers here. Things like apps can have workarounds for those that would be interested in early adoption of Linux phones. But there's no way around the combination of carrier certification costs and limited options of only very locked down hardware.

  • I think there's some sort of a west coast trend towards immutable distros. Bazzite has the same kind of buzz. Haven't really met anyone that uses these distros around me, though.

  • Presumably if there isn't a user report for whatever distro I'm using

    Distro is unlikely to matter, as long as you don't pick a really obscure one. And even then, flatpaks will probably work fine.

    Protondb also looks to be focused on Steam, I'm guessing it's like MacOS where if it's a game not on Steam then you're shit out of luck if there isn't a Linux specific version?

    Steam is the easiest to work with and most well-supported. But there are other managers like Heroic Launcher and Lutris that can cover non-steam. Knowing whether a game can run on proton/wine outside of Steam does likely require a google search, though. Most things can be made to work as long as the game doesn't require kernel-level anticheat (e.g. Destiny and BF6).

  • I... really wonder who in the administration is coming up with all these ideas. It's gotta be someone who has a staff, and that staff must feel like the most useless people in policy since their boss must be coming up with these ideas while cracked out and not running them by anyone...

  • Inside Games claims a 50% drop in views from July. PC users were 27% of their views then and is now down to 21%, but that alone can't account for the drastic drop in viewership overall. Video on it here:

    https://youtu.be/tWKTC0nVI10

  • There was. Some channels even saw most of their decline from mobile/TV viewers.

    That doesn't necessarily mean that wasn't also related to the adblocker issue, though. How the algorithm reacted to the dramatic change in views could have made waves that saw channels de-recommended or caused it to ignore sections of a viewer's watch history and thus the recommendations shown to them as well.

    With the algorithm everything gets tied together so much that any disruption can have unpredictable effects.

  • it would be cool to have some sort of optical displays based on interference (suppose, two lasers at the sides of the screen) or whatever, allowing similarly agile resolution change, and also more energy-efficient than LCDs, and also better for one's eyes. I think there even are some, just very expensive

    I think you're just describing laser projection TVs ( though the projection is from the front or back, generally). They're not that expensive — just huge. For their size, they're much cheaper than LCDs and OLEDs, but they only come in about 100+".

    https://www.walmart.com/ip/Hisense-L5H-4K-UHD-Ultra-Short-Throw-Laser-TV-Projector-with-100-Light-Rejecting-Screen-Dolby-Vision-Dolby-Atmos-Google-TV/5003861077?classType=REGULAR

    Scanning laser projection is also used in virtual retinal displays, but that's for stuff like HUDs or a head-mounted display since it projects on (or rather - into) a person's eye instead of a screen.

    Any kind of scanning display will probably have poor latency compared to LCD/OLED flat panels, I think, though.

  • Heroic Launcher fulfils the basics for it.

  • Of course they have. We even have the Librem 5 that's sold here. The big problem the linux phones face is the cost of getting certified by all three carriers here — and without carrier cert, they just don't work.

  • Norway is not EU

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  • Fuckin Shakespeare is screwed.

  • The benefits of having a full-featured computer in my pocket are just too many for me to ditch it permanently if I have a choice. While it's certainly able to distract me if I let it, I don't think I've ever had it disrupt my sleep (aside from late night phone calls).

    I think it's better for most (and potentially easier) to keep to the smartphone and just better control the applications that are on it and the notifications that they raise to make sure it isn't overly distracting you. This may require disabling certain pre-installed apps (e.g. Facebook is one I always disable and just interact with via browser when I want to). Another pattern to follow is adding barriers to the things that distract you most so it takes a little more effort to interact with your distractions. Hank Green's Focus Friend app that got popular recently is an example of that -- placing an emotional barrier on getting distracted when you need to focus.

    But ultimately, we all need to do what's best for ourselves. Everyone's suceptibility to distraction is different and if a dumbphone is what works best for you, then by all means, go with that for as long as it's useful.

  • I suspect this kind of willful ignorance is the result of the resistance to taking climate action. For decades now, people have been hearing the argument "Why spend effort or suffer pain trying to avoid a fate that only might be catastrophic?" Now that's extended to things like disease and even the economy.

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  • Industry growth. Turns out it's a lot easier to "think of the children" when the industry is small and niche than it is when it's making investors billions of dollars a year. Turns out capitalism makes problems harder to solve once the problem itself makes money (see also: tax preparation)

    That's also why the moral panic people switched from trying to censor games through government to trying to do it via finance (e.g. Collective Shout lobbying banks, credit cards, and payment processors).

    Though if your question is about why the contrast between moral panic over game content and the lack of moral panic over actual victimization — I think that's always been the case, unfortunately. People seem more fearful of their children losing their morals than they are of people with no morals harming their children.

  • Android @lemdro.id

    Device makers hiding the SoC they are using is a terrible recent trend