oceane

joined 2 years ago
[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago)

I may sound too radical, but I'd go so far as to support a common Logseq knowledge graph.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 21 hours ago

Hi, this is an excellent answer.

I didn't mean to dismiss online resources, but to highlight the continuous entrepreneurship in dismissing foundational knowledge. My post was honestly, rather bad for the reasons mentioned a few minutes ago, but the sentence “Linux is only free if your time has no value” erases the pleasure of reading books and getting new skills. It literally means that free and open source software can't be more useful than whatever Google and Microsoft are developing, which doesn't even include passwords managers.

Secondly, the difference you make between free and open source software are very interesting but to my understanding, it may boil down to the freedom 0 : free software is made for everyone, whereas open source software is made for specialized communities. Because most people don't even write simple software, and I'm not talking about enterprise-level complexity here, most open source software is written for other developers. I've observed thousands of anonymous messages which coincidentally blurred the difference between free software and open source software by e.g. promoting the sway window manager that we know and love. On 4chan at least, calling people to hurt themselves has become an acronym (to whomever reads this, please don't hurt yourself).

I'm not sure my own definition of free vs. open source software is the right one, but I know the actual difference is leveraged to kill people – comrades even.

And finally, I agree about everything else. I didn't properly develop about GNU software because I was trying to leave my screen.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 22 hours ago

Hi, it may depend on the background, but personally I've been stuck on problems for months, only to solve them by spending 2 hours reading a book. I'm talking about basic self-taught tools like Git, your first programming language, and so on – Microsoft and Google build and leverage platforms to keep specific demographics stuck for years, and to some extent, to kill them.

I'm not talking about solving problems on a complex stack with tools that you already know, but rather about learning to program the output of a Skribe document as a social media-addict 4chan user. We're not even talking about Makefiles here, but about hundreds of thousands of people actually giving a hand to free software development, instead of trying to change the world in free form fields.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 3 days ago

Alright, that's pretty cool, sorry – I thought it was a list of links automatically inserted in lieu of comments.

I've been trying to get into the IndieWeb for years, but I've been struggling to implement it. Doesn't it rely on a central server too? Can we use it in a fully e.g. decentralized or federated way – would it even make sense, or could we easily switch to another flagship server, as we did with the Freenode takeover?

Please feel no pressure to reply, I can do my own research ^_^

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 2 points 3 days ago

Thank you, a tip for finding valuable resources is to add the best tools to your query, e.g. "org emacs para method".

You may lookup specialized jargon on Wikipedia, and then merely append them to your query.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 2 points 3 days ago

Hi, because there are messages on 4chan claiming that “Linux is only free if your time has no value.”

Thank you for the nice message, but to be honest, I regret posting it. I should've put more care into the style – anyway, there have been daily persistent anti-free software messages on 4chan for more than a decade, leading me to think about Olgina-style contractual workers. Some patterns seem to (1) defend Google, (2) put users back into depression, (3) promote the confusion between libre software and open source software, (4) shatter the EU and US IT work forces over demographic traits, through anti-LGBTQIA+, racist, misogynistic, antisemitic messages.

Some of these pattern seem to match known Kremlin strategies, others defend the interests of Microsoft and Google so well, matching other patterns I've observed with Android, YouTube, and Windows/Office 365 development, that I'm starting to collect evidence in Denote. I need to sort out coincidences, to account for the fact that many orgs may actually post anonymously on 4chan (including Nazis and orgs false-flagging as Nazis) but that's one hell of a lot of coincidences.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 3 days ago

It may happen through union development, and free software development, i.e. whatever form of permanent democracy you prefer.

25% of any population being able to democratically vote for a strike and fully enforce it will de facto become the main political force in the country.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Hi, does it have any advantage over greping your RSS feeds for your blog's URL?

 

Sooo there's free software (“Everyone should be able to write open source software!”) and there's open source software (people programming their own computers for their own communities). Ideally, Neima should be able to program her computer to help her kids do their homework or for their sports club. So there's open source software that's written for the developers community, and there's open source software that's written for the GNOME community, which is polished and truly a delightful experience for new users: if for example you installed Linux Mint with Cinnamon, you'd connect to the wifi and probably be immediately greeted with a notification telling you that your printer has been added and is ready to go.

I'm not saying that Linux users should learn programming, especially if they don't know about e.g. GNU Guix, Skribe/Skribilo/Haunt, or SICP (that's directly referenced by the Haunt info pages – I promise you, starting a blog as an English speaker with a Skribe implementation and reading SICP once you get comfortable enough could get you started in months); but that of course, learning any field on such a platform as Stack Overflow would provide an absolutely stupid experience, whereas the ideal learning medium is books.

It isn't enough for Google to insert far-right suggestions in YouTube shorts; they've deliberately sabotaged features in their search engine to get us to generate more ads, and Google Scholar results are, by the way, the bottom of the barrel too. Compare queries results to "sex work" or "borderline disorder transgender" with those of HAL and wonder why there's a public distrust in science. More broadly, Google hinders our relationship to information, and we're both trading it for a far-right agenda.

The same is just as true for LaTeX: it's a great, intuitive language, provided that you read some good introduction on the topic. As a matter of fact, Maïeul Rouquette's French-speaking book is available for free on HAL.

I'm more and more fed up as I write that and I'm pretty sure it shows. You may totally use open source software, meant for the non-technical community of a graphical library, desktop environment, Linux distribution, and so forth. But if you really wanted to "learn Linux", please install any distro you're comfortable with and read some good book on whatever topic you want to work on.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 6 days ago

Try spending 5-7 hours a day, for years, on a stupid website and you'll figure it out.

I'm speechless with the way this community, not just you, has reacted – i.e. sure, I'm sorry for the leaps in my reasoning, but it precisely was the point.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 1 points 1 week ago

Hi, sorry I was logged out due to 2FA, and I didn't really try to log back until now.

I agree about the “unusual leap of contextual logic made to connect Twitter to Emacs”. For my defense, repeating the same idea over and over is exhausting, and this is precisely how social media addicts use microblogging.

I don't have the time to answer right now, I know from experience it would take several A4 pages, but thank you for the kind answer.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 0 points 2 years ago (2 children)

It's free software, funded by donations. Anyway, no, not where I live, and I'm autistic, you're comparing the way I communicate with an ad.

[–] oceane@jlai.lu 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (6 children)

Oh, definitely not a purchase, but Emacs. My life was a mess because of Twitter and it was anti-Twitter in every way – no characters limit, offline, insanely powerful. While Twitter would prevent me from prioritizing, Org-mode could handle task lists, spreadsheets, text documents, with academic citations support, and could export them to .ics, .odt, .pdf, .md, etc. Ideas are affordances and Emacs has let me focus on these instead of trying to build a picture perfect online profile.

Whereas Twitter isn't meant for most people's use cases so it runs a long-term scam called “optimization for engagement” (which is actually abuse by definition), doing everything it can to prevent its victims from taking hindsight on and conceptualizing what's happening to them, Emacs is letting me channel all of this frustration into reading and writing my master thesis. Which deals with how social media increase social inequalities. Highly recommended.

view more: next ›