• 7 Posts
  • 121 Comments
Joined 1 month ago
cake
Cake day: March 15th, 2025

help-circle
rss

  • How do you usually deal with that aspect? What I do is to make the documentation easily skimmable (for advanced readers) and just accept the need for rework.

    Confluence’s “Expand” element. Make everything into an easy to read task-list, but if more details are necessary, just expand a step and get an “idiot proof” description. Bookstack allows that as well, even better, because you can nest them (Confluence had that up until they “updated” the editor and killed half the features).

    EDIT: “Include Page” in Confluence also works wonders here. For example, I have an article describing how to RDP to our AD server. In all articles that describe a process that needs to be done on the AD server, I just include that page. If any connection details change, I just edit the original article and the changes immediately propagate to all the other instances.


  • I write mine with a simple mindset: “imagine we go outside with a net, catch a random person off the street, sit them at the PC and tell them to do X. Will they manage, following this documentation?”

    I also number every step (even if they’re stupidly simple and could technically be jumbled into a single sentence), so that when a user calls me asking for help with something documented, all I need to do is ask them “at which step of the instructions are you encountering the problem”, and then they hang up because they never read the instructions in the first place. Saves a lot of hassle!


  • do you have nvidia?

    AMD. The distro I had did something weird where I was getting around 10-15 FPS on the Desktop until I added the community repos and installed drivers from there. Everything was great until I realised that Steam stopped working at all and Heroic Launcher wouldn’t launch any games. After hopping over to Garuda, everything is fine-ish. Every now and again I launch something like Hogwarts Legacy and just need to reboot because nothing loads after the disclaimers. Still haven’t figured out how to launch Mafia DE. Etc., etc.

    i’m going to push back on this a bit (…) gaming on Linux isn’t like it was 10 years ago

    I’m not arguing that, I myself said that it’s great today with things like Proton.

    But saying that it’s “better than on Windows” is just flat out insanity.

    but that isn’t Linux’s fault, it’s theirs.

    Average Joe doesn’t care who’s fault it is, just that he can’t play his favourite game without issues or terminal hacking.




  • Thank you for being the sane one.

    I’ve recently stumbled upon a lot of people like whoever wrote the article, rampaging all over the place, going “Linux is more user-friendly than Windows”, which is just an insane thing to say.

    Linux is great, I love my Garuda to bits. But games are still optimised for Windows, we still need to use compatibility layers to get them running, and even though it’s gotten MUCH easier these days, there’s still a lot of titles that require tweaking/hacking. And some just refuse to run, period.

    And then you have all the hardware compatibility issues that come with manufacturers just not supporting stuff. I can’t turn my GPU’s RGB off without Windows. I had to distro-hop to get the GPU drivers working correctly (it might be a “skill issue”, but that just proves the point, I think). Even titles that are marked as Gold on ProtonDB sometimes crash or refuse to run randomly.





  • Small steps? What small steps are you talking about? We both know there are none

    Yeah, absolutely nothing’s been done (other than two court cases, one ban, and a bunch of further actions I outlined).

    It’s a shame that you’re so thoroughly brainwashed into this tribal attitude, mate. You seem like a smart person, but somehow, when it comes to this “us vs them” you revert to a mindless fundamentalist no different than a Taliban blowing up statues…

    I hope you find it in yourself to take a step back and look at things from a wider perspective, to see that you can applaud the good moves of a bad party, while still pointing out the bad ones.

    Peace!


  • try and look at what I am saying outside the lens of internal US politics.

    I’m not from the US, I think this is how I’m looking at this.

    An oligarch gang does not engage in good faith with respect to anti-trust

    I already said this a couple of times, but seems like I have to repeat it: nobody in the conversation (Yen included) believes Trump did anything “in good faith”. I specifically stated that I believe whatever anti-trust policies and actions Trump has made were done explicitly in bad faith, as an attempt to get back at “Big Tech” for being “anti-right-wing”.

    To try and imply otherwise (and be all high and mighty about it) is essentially mocking your customers.

    He didn’t “imply otherwise”. Not once has he stated that he “believes in the long term mission of the Republican party to fight for the rights of the consumers”. He only said that Reps became anti-Big Tech recently and that it’s good.

    Again: there are no statements of intent, ONLY statement of fact.

    The examples you cited mean nothing

    I’m sorry, what??

    You asked “what were the good things [Reps did]”. I gave you examples. You didn’t ask “what did the attempts accomplish”, did you?

    Considering it’s the US we’re talking about, and how hilariously long some court cases can take, it’d be a miracle to see ANYTHING come out of these cases before 2030 (assuming they’re not trashed now that Big Tech is back in bed with Trump, of course).

    However, it is an undeniable, objective FACT that these cases are a start, that these examples show anti-Big Tech attitude, and that these are examples of Trump admin’s (accidental) fight for the betterment of the life of “the little guy”.

    then you would actually highlight some real world results

    Did you forget about the Tik-Tok ban? Again, you asked for examples of actions, not results. Considering how fresh things are (it all started fairly late into his previous term), I don’t know why you’re expecting many examples of results, that’s just being extremely unrealistic.

    Although I will say there is a beautiful irony in the following phrase (…)

    Well, that’s because you still seem to be thinking in a kind of “all or nothing” way. It’s either “Trump == Hitler” or “OMG I love Trump” for you - no inbetween. It’s either “they completely obliterated Big Tech” or “absolutely nothing accomplished”. It’s like you don’t believe in small steps? I honestly am baffled by your responses so far.

    This whole situation is baffling. It’s literally:

    Me: Guy said X, not Y.

    You: Well, he shouldn’t have said Y.

    Me: But he didn’t.

    You: But he very well didn’t say Z, therefore he meant Y.

    It’s just… weird to me.

    Anyway, maybe read THIS comment by Yen which he made just 3 months ago, and THIS post from a day later… It sheds some more light about his stance on things.

    I don’t see any malicious intent in there, do you?





  • Once again, you are the person in this thread arguing about the rightness or wrongness. The fact is he made a post praising trump

    Oh God, we’re running in circles, this conversation no longer makes sense.

    I guess if I ever end up in a situation when I say “Trump accidentally did something good”, I’m now a Trump supporter and I’m praising him, and I’m MAGA - in your book. Right? Oh, no, sorry, I’m actually a Nazi supporter! Well, fuck off, and fuck you.

    Further, what you just said looks like a carbon copy of other bad faith arguments I’ve seen on lemmy on this subject

    Have you ever stopped to think that maybe the reason you’ve seen “carbon copies” of those arguments is because these are not arguments, these are statements of fact? And the only thing making them “bad faith arguments” in your mind is that they go against your fundamentalist worldview of “us vs them”?

    Don’t bother answering, I know you haven’t.

    EOT on my end.


  • No.

    I mean, it’s probably reported as that a lot, but no, they didn’t.

    First of all: Proton provides privacy, NOT anonymity.

    Second of all: the authorities knew the suspect used Wire. Subpoena on Wire revealed the user had a Proton email account. Subpoena on Proton revealed that they had an iCloud recovery email.

    Once they subpoenaed Apple, they got all the data they needed - name, address, etc., etc.

    Proton didn’t give up their user, but they are legally obligated to provide any data they have on the user if a court orders them to. Had the user’s recovery email been a Tuta address, or even another Proton mailbox, that would’ve been the end of it.


  • It’s disrespectful because he think his customers are stupid enough to buy his ruse about “genuinely” thinking that a Trump admin would be concerned about anti-trust.

    But… He never said that?

    He said that “democrats used to stand for the little guy, but tables have turned”. Again, in context he’s 100% correct - Dems went to bed with a lot of big business while Reps started a lot of anti-trust anti-BigTech moves (which, due to tribalism, Dems criticised).

    He doesn’t say anything else - nothing about him “thinking the Trump admin is concerned about X”, he just states a simple fact.

    And we live in a time when stating a fact makes you “the enemy of the people” because, apparently, “my feeling are more important than facts” rings true on both sides of the political divide… And that’s shameful.

    You referenced the current US admin assigning someone who is allegedly anti-trust? So what? What does this have to with anything?

    Well… only just the fact that this is precisely what he was commenting on?

    What do you mean “what dos that have to do with anything”?? It’s got literally the entirety of it.

    What exactly were the good things?

    DOJ Antitrust Lawsuit Against Google (2020)- Focused on Google’s deals with Apple and others to maintain default search engine status, thus harming competitors.

    FTC Antitrust Lawsuit Against Facebook (December 2020)- To potentially break up Facebook by forcing it to divest those companies.

    DOJ Antitrust Review of Big Tech (2019)- Laid groundwork for later actions, like the 2020 Google lawsuit.

    FTC Tech Task Force (2019)- Re-examined acquisitions like Facebook’s of Instagram and WhatsApp.

    Trump’s Executive Order on Section 230 (May 2020) to weaken legal protections that shield social media platforms from liability over user content and moderation decisions. - didn’t get much done as actual change would require Congressional action. But it intensified scrutiny of Big Tech.

    And indirectly: Trump supported conservative-led Congressional hearings and investigations into Big Tech’s political power and influence or pushed the idea that companies like Amazon were harming small businesses and exploiting USPS.

    Obviously, most of these were fuelled by his pettiness (he always complained about social media having anti-conservative bias and wanted to hurt them in retaliation), but you cannot look at these and go “all of this is shite” and not be considered either insane or a fundamentalist.

    Which major company was broken up? Which executives went to jail?

    Don’t be childish. We’re not talking about completely redefining the tech landscape, we’re talking about reining a couple of “too big” companies in.

    Try and look at what I am saying outside the lens of internal US politics. As I said earlier, I am not even necessarily saying that the Proton CEO is a Trump supporter, that doesn’t make the situation any better.

    What you seem to be saying is: “he didn’t criticise Trump, therefore he went against his client-base’s belief system, and that’s a bad thing”.

    Am I getting this right? Maybe elaborate on what’s your exact stance on Yen if I’m getting something confused?




  • I just find it sad that we came to a point where any public discourse is this tribal.

    There are things the Trump admin did objectively right (often for all the wrong reasons), but people like you will not only not allow themselves to acknowledge that, you’ll put people like me, who do, to the “Trump supporter or gullible fool” basket without giving it a second thought.

    We blame the right-wing for creating a massive divide in society, and then this happens? The left-wing is equally as responsible for this divide, it seems. At least for maintaining, if not deepening, it.