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35 votes
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Nostalgia -- what programs do you miss?
What are those programs that you used back in the day (or even recently!) that you look back on fondly and think about how they once were-- or worse, programs that seemed to have just up and...
What are those programs that you used back in the day (or even recently!) that you look back on fondly and think about how they once were-- or worse, programs that seemed to have just up and disappeared?
What made me think of this question, for me, was Opera. It had everything: browsing, RSS, and torrenting all in one browser. However, a lot of sites loved to break in it since it was the least supported and I eventually moved to Firefox (then Chrome, then Firefox...). Looking at the browser now-- and unsure if I'm just picky or its a case of enshittification, or both-- I'm just "meh."
99 votes -
Hackers exploited a zero-day flaw in Ivanti's software undetected for at least three months, US and Norwegian cybersecurity agencies warn
14 votes -
Windows could become cloud based in the future
16 votes -
Suggestions for updating a fitness tracker?
(US) My Fitbit Charge 2 is on her last legs. I'm torn between looking at a smart watch, a smarter fitness tracker, or something at relatively the same level. I have a Pixel and don't use the Apple...
(US) My Fitbit Charge 2 is on her last legs. I'm torn between looking at a smart watch, a smarter fitness tracker, or something at relatively the same level. I have a Pixel and don't use the Apple ecosystem but really don't know what route to go.
Mostly I like the reminder to move, step tracking, and the simple notifications on the Charge 2. I don't need to answer my phone on my watch, I think, but seeing that it's my partner calling is a big deal. But I also could be that person desperately waiting to discover smart watches and fall in love with them, I suppose.
Longer battery life would be preferable as remembering to charge things is a less than fun side-quest. And I doubt I'd be using GPS on it. But again, maybe I would? Open to all suggestions.
18 votes -
C64 OS: A modern(ish) operating system for the Commodore 64
16 votes -
What text comparison software do you use?
I've only had exposure to Beyond Compare and would like your opinion/suggestions on what's good. mostly, I use it to compare two different versions of similar csv and potentially to merge them....
I've only had exposure to Beyond Compare and would like your opinion/suggestions on what's good.
mostly, I use it to compare two different versions of similar csv and potentially to merge them. Next use case is to compare two versions of simple scripts to see what's been updated.
Command line tools are a little too much for me, but if it seem to be very important to learn I supposed I could be encouraged to do so.
11 votes -
Fediverse software Calckey to be re-branded as Firefish
12 votes -
Microsoft lost its keys, and the US government got hacked
25 votes -
Evernote, the memory app people forgot about, lays off entire US staff
93 votes -
What webhost and software do you use for your personal website?
In the 2000s, I had Blogger or a subdomain on some random free host. I even tried Ning at some point. Since 2012, I’ve had a personal site at a custom domain, on Squarespace, then WordPress who...
In the 2000s, I had Blogger or a subdomain on some random free host. I even tried Ning at some point.
Since 2012, I’ve had a personal site at a custom domain, on Squarespace, then WordPress who knows where, then Tumblr, then WordPress on Linode, now a combo Bear Blog and GitHub Pages.
I dislike WordPress for how clunky it is, Squarespace for how expensive it is, Tumblr for how obviously Tumblr it is (I could say the same about Squarespace and many WordPress sites), GitHub Pages for making me use git to post. Basically, I’m not happy with anything.
So I thought I’d ask los Tildeños—do you have a personal site? What web host and tech stack are you using for it? What do you like/dislike about it? What else have you tried?
47 votes -
The main problem with the Fediverse is that people mostly just use it to talk about the Fediverse
Something I've noticed about the Fediverse, especially Mastodon, is that there doesn't seem to be a whole lot of discussion going on except for meta discussion. For example, if you go on Mastodon,...
Something I've noticed about the Fediverse, especially Mastodon, is that there doesn't seem to be a whole lot of discussion going on except for meta discussion.
For example, if you go on Mastodon, you'll find lots of people talking about how Mastodon is the future. You'll find lots of people asking how to do certain things on the platform. But you really have to dig to find actual discussion about topics beyond the platform itself.
Even when you do find people not doing meta discussion, there aren't really any people talking with each other. There's people sharing content but not a lot of people interacting with it. Even basic stuff you see on other social media sites like people giving each other compliments just isn't really there. You can see everyone's stuff but it's just shouting into the void.
I think that the Fediverse has a severe problem with holding people's interest, and the most die-hard people who are interested just want to use it to talk about itself.
126 votes -
OpenResume
8 votes -
Who killed Google Reader - a ten year anniversary retrospective discussion
76 votes -
Free and/or open-source software alternatives for churches
I've been seeing some cool software in the church space lately with lots of fancy bells and whistles that handle many different aspects of running a church (social, presentation, tithing, etc.)....
I've been seeing some cool software in the church space lately with lots of fancy bells and whistles that handle many different aspects of running a church (social, presentation, tithing, etc.). However, not all churches, especially small ones, can afford them or have members savvy enough to set it all up and maintain/operate them. I thought this could be a cool thread for free and or open source software that churches can use can use (Does not necessarily need to be design specifically for churches).
EDIT
Here is a list of paid examples:- Renewed Vision
- ProPresenter
- ProVideoPlayer
- ProVideoServer
- Scoreboard
- ProContent
- Microsoft Office
- PowerPoint
- Excel
- Google
- Slides
- Sheets
- Forms
Here is a short list of FOSS alternatives:
- Free Show
- Owncast
- Rock RMS
- Choyr
- OBS
- OpenLP
- WorshipTools
21 votes - Renewed Vision
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Help with converting PDF to Excel and back to PDF?
I may be asking a dumb question or going about this wrong but I'm not sure what to do here. So right now, I receive an estimation from one company in a PDF. It has a bunch of fields such as...
I may be asking a dumb question or going about this wrong but I'm not sure what to do here.
So right now, I receive an estimation from one company in a PDF. It has a bunch of fields such as customer name, product, address, etc. Then I type that data and put it into Excel, where I add additional data that I have. From there I have a second PDF which has form fields that I fill with the data of the Excel spreadsheet.
My problem is with the first PDF that I get from this other company, unless I am doing something wrong I am unable to get that first PDF to show the data as fields. If I convert the first PDF into an Excel then the table data is very messy.
The amount of typing or copy and paste that it's not hard but it is time consuming. What is the best way for me to go about doing this? I've been Googling things but I'm not sure the right words of action I'm looking for.
I hope this all makes sense, but if not please ask questions and I'll do my best to try and clarify further.
12 votes -
Windows 98 icons are great
17 votes -
Modern Software Engineering: A Series - Part 1
6 votes -
Sync developer announces Sync for Lemmy
91 votes -
An intuitive visual guide on how hashing works, step-by-step
9 votes -
Why former Salesforce engineers want to take on Google
6 votes -
Anyone can Photoshop now, thanks to AI’s latest leap
12 votes -
What we can learn from the upside-down world of FOSDEM, the largest conference organized with free software
8 votes -
Why does it seem that FOSS users don't value user-friendliness very much?
The vast majority of free and open source software available is well known for being clunky, having very unintuitive UI/UX and being very inaccessible to non-nerds. We can see this in Linux...
The vast majority of free and open source software available is well known for being clunky, having very unintuitive UI/UX and being very inaccessible to non-nerds.
We can see this in Linux distros, tools, programs and even fediverse sites.
I understand that a lot of it is because "it's free", but I also feel like a lot of people who make and use FOSS don't actually value user-friendliness at all. I feel like some of it is in order to gatekeep the less tech savvy out, and some of it is "it's good enough for me".
What are the best theories for why this is the case?
EDIT: A lot of replies I've been getting are focusing on the developers. I'm asking more why the users seem okay with it, rather than why the developers make it that way.
67 votes -
Evolution of the scrollbar
23 votes -
Among the three major operating systems, which one cares the most about their user's privacy?
Here are my views on this: Windows: The Windows attitude towards privacy isn't good with their telemetry and other data collection increasing gradually from 8 to 10 to 11. In fact, most geeks...
Here are my views on this:
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Windows: The Windows attitude towards privacy isn't good with their telemetry and other data collection increasing gradually from 8 to 10 to 11. In fact, most geeks across the support forums think that 7 is probably the safest and most privacy friendly Windows version but MS is doing everything it can to ensure that newer software doesn't support 7 and it just goes into obsolescence.
The "default" state in which a W10/11 laptop comes today is so privacy unfriendly that it sends all kinds of data like contacts, location, etc. to Microsoft and their "trusted partners". You can't turn off this data unless you've visited power user forums and know exactly where to find those settings, and basic telemetry still won't be disabled of course.
As ironic and unintuitive as it sounds, Microsoft Windows was probably much better in privacy department during the bad old days of Gates and Ballmer compared to the good "open source and geek friendly" days of Satya Nadella!
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Mac: Apple systems should ideally be privacy friendly considering the amount of premium they charge to their products and services. But how well does that work in practice? I've never used an Apple product but those who use them seem to have the impression that they're no good in this department compared to others.
Logic tells me that a more capitalist devil should be no different than the less capitalist one, they're probably all the same when it comes to throwing user's privacy in the bin! -
Linux: Linux used to be the holy grail of users who cared about privacy many years ago but does that still hold good today? Ubuntu was also in some data collection controversy or other many times in past, but how are the state of things today? And what about the derivative distros, are they good too?
13 votes -
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YouTube orders ‘Invidious’ privacy software to shut down in seven days
62 votes -
Windows 11's latest endearing mess contains rigorously enforced Britishisms
18 votes -
Apple WWDC 2023 megathread (link goes to Apple event page)
23 votes -
Apple Vision Pro was just announced. It's Apple's first foray into AR/VR headsets.
61 votes -
Stand up for open source software patent defense
7 votes -
App Store developers generated $1.1 trillion in total billings and sales in the App Store ecosystem in 2022
9 votes -
CodeWeavers, maker of open source Wine software used in Linux gaming, transitions to employee ownership trust
14 votes -
Windows 10 will reach end of support on October 14, 2025
24 votes -
Teachers in Denmark are using apps to audit their students' moods – some experts are heavily skeptical of the approach
7 votes -
The Bitcoin whitepaper is hidden in every modern copy of macOS
14 votes -
Adobe announces Firefly, generative AI tooling inside of Adobe Creative Suite products
11 votes -
core-js: So, what's next?
15 votes -
UChicago scientists develop new tool to protect artists from AI mimicry
8 votes -
SolarWinds and market incentives
8 votes -
FOSDEM 2023: Glad to be back
3 votes -
Shipping graphing calculator
3 votes -
Apple Maps privacy bug may have allowed apps to collect location data without permission
9 votes -
Project Code Rush - The Beginnings of Netscape (2000)
4 votes -
How a single developer dropped Amazon Web Services costs by 90%, then disappeared
16 votes -
What are some of the best blogs, journals, e-magazines, etc. about programming or software development in general?
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in...
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in this field have to say. The problem is that there is just so much information overload everywhere, just so many youtube videos and articles that it seems overwhelming to differentiate the wheat from the chaff!
Since reading is my preferred medium of instruction, I want to know what are the blogs, journals, etc. on this topic with some street cred? And preferably individual experts and blogs, not companies. Company or corporate sites and blogs seem to be more hype than substance these days.
Which ones do you refer for keeping up to date?
8 votes -
Best video editing apps for mobile in 2023
3 votes -
KmCaster – Screencasting software to display keyboard and mouse status
4 votes -
US Navy forced to pay software company for piracy
5 votes -
Remote Access that's safe and not a scary nightmare
My child (who does not live with me) has a PC. He's pretty good at sorting problems out for himself, but he sometimes needs extra help. We've tried doing this over phone and video calls, and it's...
My child (who does not live with me) has a PC. He's pretty good at sorting problems out for himself, but he sometimes needs extra help. We've tried doing this over phone and video calls, and it's an unfun experience for both of us.
Is there a remote access software that would fit our needs? I want to be able to connect to his computer over the Internet and have some level of control when he's logged into his account. I'd need to be able to open files, I wouldn't have to be able to save them. He's using Windows 11. I think he's using the home version. I'm using Windows 10 Pro. We both have reasonably good Internet speed.
8 votes