> Gnome 2, KDE 3 - The old-style interfaces. Simplicity.
Good one. The good news is, some alternate versions of some of those are still available and maintained. And, at least since they're OSS, worst case, you could fork it yourself. :-)
> BZFlag - no one cares about this anymore :(
I hear ya. I've been thinking about setting up a BZFlag instance on a Fogbeam server, alongside some other "classic" technologies and just put it out there for people to play around with.
> - AOL / MSN / Yahoo Chat. People were more open to making friendships online.
Don't forget ICQ. That said, I don't so much miss those, as just wishing people would use Jabber instead of Facebook Messenger or this other proprietary crap.
> - Gnome 2, KDE 3 - The old-style interfaces. Simplicity.
and associated programs deprecated along with them -> Gnome Blackjack, Kooka OCR and Quanta Plus IDE. Also the quick desktop responsiveness.
> - BZFlag - no one cares about this anymore :(
Been there a few times in the last couple weeks, yeah kinda quiet.
> - MySpace - I liked how you could customize it. It was more individualistic
I think if someone refactored it they might get converts from Facebook.
My Additions:
- FoxBase +/Mac (very underrated tool, you could do a lot more than you realize with it)
- Claris Works/AppleWorks (the database on it was quite simple, creative and usable.)
- AI/EPS exporters for PrintShop Deluxe graphics
- Software that had MORE features when new versions come out.
> Gnome 2, KDE 3 - The old-style interfaces. Simplicity.
I remember the tetris clone KSirtet from KDE 3.x projects very
fondly. It was quick, responsive, aesthetically pleasing in its
minimality and fun to play. KDE 4 introduced this new iteration
called KBlocks that was simply a travesty in terms of usability.
Very slow controls, odd delays in a dead-simple game, useless
graphics.
> FF users have almost halved over the last 2 years,
That's not what your linked chart shows. First, the chart is a % market share, not raw user counts. Second, ~18% down to ~13% isn't really "almost half" anyway.
Yeah but significant still. 27.7% of their pie disappeared.
Recent versions of Firefox have introduced third party plugins (like pocket).
After the Eich thing, they lost the "hacker" cred and their talent was pretty easy much poached. Further, the concept of merit - overlooking the political in lieu of skill / talent - is no longer a core value of the organization. [1]
Recruiters were all over linkedin and taking away the best talent left and right.
You don't have to read any of the political culture ranting of ESR (and you probably shouldn't unless you're masochistic) to have seen that Eich was railroaded and screwed and witch-hunted pretty hard.
It seems very reasonable to interpret that whole situation as Mozilla acknowledging the importance of politics over technical leadership--fair or not, when you broadcast your realpolitik that hard, you're gonna lose people.
> when you broadcast your realpolitik that hard, you're gonna lose people.
Hacker culture may not necessarily be aligned with Eich's personal views / situations. But crucial underlying concept is ignoring nebulous things like that. So taking action / reforms based off the premise feels like a Chesteron's fence [1].
Bands on Bandcamp usually pay more for their equipment and concerts than they earn from it. Those tiny independent bands are the most honest bunch of musicians you can find who do music by themselves and for the sake of music -- not for the sole purpose of generating revenue. There are people in there who rehearse in their own basements and who pay with the own money for recording sessions just for you to be able to listen to it.
You can listen to whole songs on Bandcamp because they want you to hear their music and they want you to enjoy it. That is the most important aspect (in contrast to these money-making, oppressive, DMCA-take-down-wielding music giants). If you don't like it, move on with your life. But if you like their music, consider tossing them a few dollars. It's a better investment than anything else related to buying music.
I think her work strikes a nice balance -- it sounds nice when I'm actually listening, but most of it is easy to tune out when I want to focus on something else.
First I wanted to say USA may be different from others in the fact that silence can't be hold against you. If police detain you, the advice I hear from lawyers is to zip it. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGgKLgVNfAo is a great presentation featuring a former detective and a defense attorney)
In other countries, like UK - not giving an alibi in situ can be used against you.
In USA - I trust the integrity of the legal system, but the police are trained to use deception - ranging from gigantic pretexts, like posing as your telephone repair man, to simple bluffs and lies. (Funny spoof: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfF8OSlGhKk)
This creates a chilling effect of distrust which discourages informants. No one worth his salt can take a cop at his or her word. And I think the cumulative result that has on communities is drowned in relation to what we see with cop violence in the public eye.
Not having a line between community and police means cases can go unsolved and serious crime can go unpunished.
> Both houses of Congress are controlled by people who talk euphemistically of the super-rich (who increasingly derive their wealth from inheritance not ingenuity) as "job creators".
I disagree. I hear too much talk about solving gaps and creating jobs, and not single shred of sympathy for the simple rich.
We need to stop thinking its our problems to solve these so-called "societal injustices". It's not my problem. I'm trying to improve myself!
People should mind their own business and try to improve their own situations. If they're in no / shitty jobs, poor health / broken families, they need to figure it out like everyone else! We can't play God and it for them.
It just enable this entitlement attitude of your piousness and their own of what they deserve.
As a member of a civil society, you have a responsibility to be charitable to those less fortunate than you. Civility is about considering other people in your own decisions.
This does not mean that you must donate all your worldly goods and live the rest of your days in poverty. What it means is that, when the time comes to vote in a property tax increase to fund education, or public transit, or any of a host of things that you think don't affect you personally, you have a responsibility to consider how these decisions will affect people who are not you, and that you should at least try to decide in favor of those people, if at all possible. I'm asking you to consider providing some resources as part of your duty to the rest of society, so that those less fortunate can have some hope of bettering themselves just as you did.
If we have any hope at all of maintaining an orderly society, we have to stop thinking only of ourselves.
Voting a tax increase is far different that donating your own money. You are voting to force others who may not agree with you to pay under threat of government violence. If you are asking me to provide resources then that is also a different story. And if you are persuasive I just might change my allocation of charitable donations. That is doing it right.
Added: I don't think the parent comment is wrong. It IS our duty to perform charity. But it should not be forced on us.
People have shown time and again that it does take action through central authority to enact societal change because people will not "change [their] allocation of charitable donations" accordingly or have an allocation of charitable donations at all.
Societal progress in the face of injustice takes action from society as a whole.
Fortunately, "no I don't want to give back to the society I take from" doesn't fly with the IRS.
So you would base aids to the less fortunate on the willingness of those who have more to "donate" to those who have less ?
How would you go to make it happen, practically ?
Since people willing to donate have no real vision of people who are in need, you would need some sort of organization to collect the donations and distribute them.
This organization would need to run some sort of policies in order to make sure the people asking for donations are actually in real need of those.
You also would need to pay the people needed to run these organizations, perform the checks, mantaining a database of people in need and donators, and perform the actual donations.
For any country (remember, a country is responsible to the welfare of all its citizens, not only the ones well-off), working with possibly millions of willing donors and petitioners, pulling off something like this without a predictable budget and some defined policies and rules is quite hard.
Thus the modern welfare state, which might not be an ideal (or even efficient) solution, but a better one has not been invented yet.
> Since people willing to donate have no real vision of people who are in need,
They usually do, it fits their vision of what a "worthy" recipient of benefits looks like. Relying on charity to provide social services would mean a significant portion of people would be cut out from receiving them, either due to policy or the lack of donations.
I really think that IDF drafting and military service should be implemented in the US, just so people can see what exactly is government forcing something upon you ...
you can say he/they have moral responsibility. but laws are what they are, and that is truly the only real responsibility for all of us. just that you feel strongly about something and feel that it is the right way doesn't make it any more enforceable.
please note that I +- agree with you. anon3_ 2 had a slightly ignorant comment, maybe not intended, but I understand his view too (albeit I don't agree that much). the thing is, if he is really rich, he for sure wants to live in calm, secure and stable society where he isn't threatened daily just because he worked hard and now he is well off. For that, there needs to be broad(er) prosperity. Poor hungry people won't stay quiet for long. On the other hand, let's face it - people are lazy. not all of course, but many. Create easy conditions, and very few will do their best for society (aka work). Create too hard conditions, and many will break without ever reaching their potential.
I think state should be there to give a helping hand to those who work hard to make better life for themselves, but NOT make the better life for themselves. How? Now that's a question nobody has really good answer for :) I would bet on proper public schooling with high wages and great inspiring teachers. Add a non-abusable health care system (statement ridiculous in real world on its own), and society will flourish. All US would need is divert maybe half of cash for waging useless wars around the globe... ah wait
> you have a responsibility to be charitable to those less fortunate than you.
According to whom? I never signed up for this.
The only "responsibilities" (what a loaded word; you automatically imply we're irresponsible if we disagree with you) I acknowledge are those I took on of my own volition.
I think it a slightly different way. As a thinking person who is (somewhat) self-actualized I feel it is my duty to perform charity. The type and amount are my choice. And I feel that other thinking people should feel the same way. So I will remind them or attempt to persuade them if they are ignoring (what I feel is) their duty.
No, I'm not trying to convince someone who has made up their mind. You're really backing yourself up into that corner, though.
Most higher organizations/clubs/associations/families engage in philanthropy and charity, most religions espouse the virtues or godliness of good will towards others and, again, most people who have the capacity to feel will agree that extending that empathy towards others is a good thing.
The point is most people, especially those who see things from a higher level socially and intellectually, recognize the value of compassion and selflessness.
Someone who balks at the suggestion that they have a responsibility as a good person to be considerate, who embodies the message of Ayn Rand's Anthem, might be considered immature. A shithead, even.
You say it's not your problem, and imply that's because it's not your fault, but how sure are you of that?
When poor people can't get decent jobs, often it's not because they aren't capable of doing them. It's because there's a systematic policy of credentialist prejudice and discrimination.
When poor people can't get any jobs, often it's because there's a systematic policy of ageist prejudice and discrimination, in many cases enforced by law, plus bureaucratic regulations that make it hard to become an employer and impose costs on employers that exceed the value an employee could provide.
When poor people can't find a place to live, it's not because there's no land or we don't have the technology to build shelter. It's because zoning laws make it illegal to build more housing anywhere you could find a job to pay for it.
When poor people are sick in the U.S., often it's not because they aren't willing and able to pay fair market price for medical treatment. It's because for every dollar you spend on real costs of medical treatment, another ten dollars are consumed by the corruption and waste in the system.
If you've ever voted for a politician who contributed to any of these problems - which is almost certainly the case if you vote Democrat or Republican - then to some extent it is your fault, and you do have some moral obligation to do something about it.
I hope you do. It is not callousness that keeps people down, it is the failure of praise and positive reinforcement to be measured with realism and criticism. Even nasty namecalling can be constructive criticism, if someone is used to criticism and is introspective.
The most abject failures I've known in life are those who've been unable to recognize their mistakes, unable to handle criticism, and most clearly, those who've always had a bailout and never hit rock bottom.
I'm wondering why this person's anger and outrage is so special, she gets her own article in the newspaper.
When people are jerks and rip me off - no one makes me a news article. And that's the problem, in the eyes of the law - you're not this VIP.
I understand her frustration in getting turned around. The rules are the rules. You wasted money on a ticket by hoping you could work on a tourist visa. No, you don't get "let off" or special treatment. Always double check to make sure you are using the correct visa!
I'm glad you feel the same way I do. I find his opinions witty and incisive, but detracting from the meat of his content.
I feel this way about his payment page too. It's involved to figure out the payment options and decide what to do. I count 10 options among his suggested 5 methods. Compare this to when I'm curious about a movie on Amazon. I see one price with one call to action.
This is true. Despite the number of choices, what Amazon has going for it is that I'm a repeat visitor and their pricing plan is consistent for movies. I've long ago decided what I want. That might change as I, say, upgrade from DVD to Blu-Ray or downsize my possessions to go digital, but in general it'll stay the same for months or years. Further, those are mostly commodity formats, so I'm used to deciding if it's worthwhile to spend my money by comparing to other vendors' pricing.
In the author's case, his product and business model are unique. There may be other "pay as you wish" eBooks elsewhere, but none with quite the same mix of fonts, donations and eBooks. Consciously or not, I think the author has made it more difficult for me to consider if and how I'd want to pay him compared with Amazon (or O'Reilly for a closer product).
Dang btw:
- https://developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/device-mode
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Valence / https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Responsive_De...
You probably answered this elsewhere, but I can't find it. What has kept you from using a CSS framework?