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18 votes
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Sweden's health minister has urged the EU to push ahead with social media restrictions for kids while insisting it be treated as a pressing matter
22 votes -
What can I do with my old Pixel 3 phone in 2025?
I recently moved to a place and unearthed an old Pixel 3. I updated it to the last official update (October 2021) but not sure what to do with it. It’s not worth any money (or at least I don’t...
I recently moved to a place and unearthed an old Pixel 3. I updated it to the last official update (October 2021) but not sure what to do with it. It’s not worth any money (or at least I don’t think so) and I have a dedicated Android gaming device (Retroid Pocket 5).
What could I do with this device?
I was trying to think of a way to use it. Was thinking of setting it up facing my backyard to film squirrels/possums/birds, but it would likely fill the storage up in less than one day of continuous recording. I’m probably getting way ahead of myself but would there be a way to use it like an IP cam or Ring doorbell that records everything not on the device?
Any other unrelated ideas are welcome too. I just don’t want to throw it away since it’s functioning quite well.
24 votes -
Reddit announces new limits on moderating large subreddits and for moderators to remove content sitewide
69 votes -
My guess and opinion on the common blockers to Linux adoption
The big one seems to be the inability to buy a mainstream device with a Linux distribution preinstalled. The few options I know of are niche devices or sometimes single models usually marketed as...
The big one seems to be the inability to buy a mainstream device with a Linux distribution preinstalled. The few options I know of are niche devices or sometimes single models usually marketed as dev devices. It is also near impossible to even find something without any os installed. Even manufacturer like Framework doesn't offer Linux preinstalled laptops or even just fully assembled ones but without os.
Lacking third party software and hardware support. This is a very real problem and something that can make Linux unviable for specific use cases but also something that will never resolve without higher adoption in personal computing, my guess is at tenth of marketshare we would start seeing it being treated as a serious option. It is amazing that something like wine exists and how well it works but it still can't do everything and it is worse than native support. Similarly not many people are willing to even consider VMs or dual booting for specific workflows that need Windows.
Fragmentation of distros and ways to do things but with standard recommended beginner distros this seems to me more of a perception then a clear problem for most use cases for majority users who would theoretically migrate.
A fallacy where people value a thing perceived to be free less also seems to play a role along with public perception of Linux and its users. Slogans such as Linux is only free if you don't value your time which is ironically IMO more true of Windows these days with the cost usually part of the price of the device and not really perceived or considered by the average buyer.
This seems similar to the usual jokes about vegans and other ill formed perceptions. My guess is that it is the result of people plain ignoring things that have potentional to be uncomfortable along with those with niche opinions being more likely to have considered them and to have strong reasons to hold them along with wanting to at least tell people what they are.
I am just plain ignoring Mac here to be more concise and because I have zero experience with them.
36 votes -
Farewell to the fediverse
25 votes -
iPhone 17, 17 Pro and Air announced
17 - https://www.apple.com/iphone-17/ 17 Pro - https://www.apple.com/iphone-17-pro/ Air - https://www.apple.com/iphone-air/
39 votes -
Microsoft testing new AI features in Windows 11 File Explorer
24 votes -
Sweden's employment agency has been tracking the online locations of thousands of citizens claiming unemployment benefits in an effort to crack down on welfare fraud
28 votes -
IRC - The Serial Port's love letter to Internet Relay Chat
26 votes -
Photo digitizing
Hi all, I've got (probably) a few thousand family photographs that I plan on scanning/digitizing. These photographs are organized into dozens or hundreds of envelopes with month/year and sometimes...
Hi all,
I've got (probably) a few thousand family photographs that I plan on scanning/digitizing. These photographs are organized into dozens or hundreds of envelopes with month/year and sometimes event description written on them. I'm on the fence between using a service to do it or DIYing it with a scanning machine.
The way I see it is -
Service pros:
- I don't have to do it myself
Service cons:
- I may have no control over how the digitized photos are tagged or organized (date tagged, filename)
- Risk of photographs being lost/damaged
- $$$$
DIY pros:
- I can tag and organize the photos exactly how I want
- Much less expensive
DIY cons:
- I have little spare time and this project could be extremely time consuming.
I would love to hear if anyone here has experience doing this and what techniques or pitfalls you may have discovered along the way.
7 votes -
Modos debuts an open-source e-paper with a 75-Hz refresh rate
52 votes -
Vimeo enters into definitive agreement to be acquired by Bending Spoons for $1.38 billion
38 votes -
KDE launches its own distribution (again)
18 votes -
Bluesky will comply with age verification laws in South Dakota and Wyoming after exiting Mississippi
18 votes -
Hands-on review of the Bluefox NX1
12 votes -
Nova Launcher discontinued
46 votes -
Signal introduces secure cloud backups
44 votes -
Why language models hallucinate
27 votes