• 11 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Remember the leadership “vote” he recently passed was based on the votes of people who paid ~$1500 to be there

    Also worth noting it was held in Calgary and all voters had to physically be there. So voters were Calgarians with enough money to get in, and people from the rest of Canada with enough money to get in and enough money/time to travel there.


  • As someone from the “MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+” community

    Since you’re alive enough to post here, I don’t think you’re from that community. Note the first three letters are for “missing and murdered Indigenous”, and the rest are modifiers from that. As I understand, Leah Gazan is using this initialism as an expansion of “MMIWG”, not as an expansion of “LGBTQ+”. She is highlighting that the “ongoing genocide” she refers to is not solely of Indigenous women and girls, but also of gender-diverse Indigenous people.








  • randy@lemmy.catoLinuxLinux in California is in deep trouble.
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    2 months ago

    There is way too much sensationalism around this law. All this law calls for is an OS-level “Are you over 18?” button, the kind that’s been all over the internet for decades. See the Ubuntu mailing list discussion for a possible technical approach. There does not appear to be any requirement for age verification beyond that of the system administrator, and reporting is by a total of four age brackets, so even the privacy impact is limited.

    The benefit of something like this is that age can be enforced by the system administrator rather than the user, so parents can set their kids’ computers with an accurate age bracket. Meanwhile, all of us with just a single user can set the highest age brackets and move on with our lives. Now, as the CEO of System76 says, kids will find ways around it, and we shouldn’t discourage kids from controlling their own computers, but he says “If there is any solace in these two laws, it’s that they don’t have any real restrictions”.

    But that same article notes that New York has a proposed bill S8102A that is much more draconian. California’s law is a minor nuisance, while New York’s bill sounds like an outright danger. Please focus on a real threat, especially considering it’s much easier to change laws while they’re still only bills.


  • AsteroidOS mostly supports watches that come stock with Wear OS, which is a modified version of Android, which, guess what, runs a Linux kernel. These watches are on the more powerful end of the computing spectrum. As you say, there are a lot of smart watches that use pretty lean MCUs, but those aren’t running AsteroidOS or Wear OS, as noted in this FAQ entry.






  • Follow the link and go down to the third point:

    Isn’t this just ReactOS?

    ReactOS tries to reimplement the Windows NT kernel, and that has always been its Achilles heel, holding it back from a hardware compatibility and stability standpoint. The loss32 concept is to achieve a similar-feeling end result to ReactOS, but built on a more usable foundation, using components known to work well (the Linux kernel, WINE, everything that glues those together, and a sprinkling of ReactOS userland niceties). As a bonus, the OS would still technically be a Linux distro, so it would be possible to run Linux software when necessary, something ReactOS can’t do.




  • My knee-jerk response is to be indignant about a cop being let off lightly, but the article does describe him as remorseful of his behaviour and taking steps to deal with his own issues. So he sounds like someone who is unlikely to reoffend, and therefore should not be punished harshly. In our justice system, I believe a non-cop would have been sentenced similarly.

    But I don’t like the idea of him continuing to work as a cop, at least beyond in-office work, as the police should be held to a high standard. He’s going to work on his own issues, but such work isn’t always quick or smooth. Being in the field dealing with challenging people raises the risk that he runs into another situation where he loses control. I don’t know what the policies are of the Guelph police, but I hope they keep a high standard here.