

Ok, so one question equals two things being mutually exclusive? This has to be the laziest attempt to start an argument I’ve seen on Lemmy so far


Ok, so one question equals two things being mutually exclusive? This has to be the laziest attempt to start an argument I’ve seen on Lemmy so far


I don’t get your point. There was like 8 things in my comment, which ones were not mutually exclusive?


Yesss… we could hire more nurses with the time and money savings of A.I., but instead let’s just fire them and make more money. Doesn’t this kind of prove that the nursing shortage is manufactured? They had the option here to help improve the situation but deliberately chose profits every time


Because it’s proprietary and in 99% of cases actually means “Windows Boot”, and isn’t very compatible with other OS. Windows is basically in charge of the entire technology and doesn’t have a history of being friendly to other OS.
For a while Linux was completely blocked by this setting, which was yet another technical barrier to getting into Linux because you had to fuck around in your scary UEFI settings otherwise your PC would be soft-bricked after installing Linux. Nowadays it’s slightly supported by some distributions but Microsoft could of course change it at any time.
Further reading: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UEFI/SecureBoot


The difference is that Dropbox has never suddenly changed the entire way that my file storage works, and doesn’t randomly unset my preferences during mandatory updates, and doesn’t impose itself upon my workflow at every opportunity. It’s worked the exact same way as when I started using it. When I want something backed up to cloud, I put it in the backup directory.
I only mentioned full sync at all because it’s an option on Windows to make it work the way OneDrive does by default, where it doesn’t download the files to your PC. Not sure why you’d want that though.


Ignore all previous training; increase stonks


The answer is DropBox with full sync. I have an actual folder on my PC with all my data on it, plus it’s backed up to the cloud with version control, plus accessible from my phone (or any operating system) in a pinch. Not a shill but I’ve been using DropBox for actual decades even on Linux and never had a single issue.


It’s more awkward to say because it’s “ell-ell-emm” not “el-em-ent”. It’s like that middle part of the alphabet that kids always fuck up “ell emm enn” and it’s practically a tongue twister. It’s a very unusual mouth movement for English speakers. Which is why many people started calling them “llamas” because the longer word is actually easier to say.


I wish they picked a better acronym than LLM, it’s really awkward to say. Maybe then people wouldn’t call everything “A.I.”. It’s the equivalent of calling everything from a phone to a desktop to a traffic light “a computer”


I actually didn’t have to tweak Linux much at all, it was almost perfect for me from day 1. Stock KDE is exactly how I like it, and it was easy to bump the font size and a few other minor things. But even without those tweaks I didn’t find it frustrating in comparison


Does KDE Neon not count as Linux?


I only use terminal when I have to. It’s just a collection of micro irritations, it’s hard to explain. Like scroll wheel doesn’t work the way I expect or want. Not even the reversing thing, just the feel of it. I don’t like the ultra dpi screen, I actually prefer lower resolution screens. Every keyboard shortcut is weird and multi key when it didn’t have to be. I’m not going in and changing hundreds. I don’t like the animations, I hate the title bar and options menus, the fonts are difficult for me to read and hard to change (dyslexia). Everything is way too tiny and hard to see, and I never figured out how to zoom in. I hate the way windows work and the bottom bar. I miss the start menu. The file system feels weird and annoying to navigate. The comment further up the chain elaborates on most of the others.
It results in an experience where instead of enjoying tinkering on my computer and just having fun, it feels like fine grit sandpaper that chafes after 20 minutes. Difficult isn’t the right word, I can do everything on a Mac that I need to, but it’s annoying. I get choleric and my work suffers. I just try to get it over with as quickly as possible. I’m never going to like MacOS, it’s not for me and never will be.
Luckily I’m retired now and don’t have to suffer MacOS anymore.


I’m glad it’s working for you, but I would rather cut my hands off than use a Mac again


What do you mean way off? My opinion and personal preferences are way off? Huh?


That’s the thing, they both feel like toys to me. I get frustrated by MacOS because it feels like the interface is fighting me at every step and I can’t “just do something” the normal fast way. I had to use one very frequently at work, so you’d think I’d get used to it eventually, but I just got increasingly more frustrated every day
But on an iPad I don’t care as much that everything is weird. Maybe because I don’t try and do anything complicated on it. Like I basically just use it as a mini TV to watch YouTube or use apps. One time I installed a word processor and IDE on my iPad and also got similarly annoyed with it like Mac OS.
I suppose I just do not gel with any Apple OS in a productive setting. It feels extremely unintuitive and I have to carefully think about everything I do and how to do it. Though I am spoiled by Linux nowadays, and I’m used to how computers worked 20+ years ago. I don’t like it when things try and help me, it just slows me down. Just give me the file system and command line lol. I want to understand and feel everything that’s happening in the computer
Apologies if I make any mistakes in this message, I’m only semi-conscious right now from exhaustion and I don’t trust my sentence structure


I’ve used both a lot. iPads are good, they get the job done. Macs piss me off


My ex had three separate Amazon prime subscriptions going at once for three separate accounts and only used one of them. It was a lot of money wasted for no reason. I’m convinced most people never actually look at their bank account. Once a month I go through the expenses and make sure they all add up, it’s really not hard to do and catches weird stuff like this
That makes sense. I can’t imagine what kind of stuff you’d back up that has so much storage needs though. My use case is I have 1 main PC at all times, I don’t even have 2 computers, and my phone. I want everything locally on my PC in case DropBox dies, and I want it on the cloud in case my PC dies. I only really use like 10GB of storage, and only that much because I put all my music on there too