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Joined 2Y ago
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Cake day: Jun 11, 2023

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As someone that despises MS Office, LibreOffice is even worse. All I wanted to do was create a simple database of contact info, donation info, and reservation scheduling for a small nonprofit. Something I could do in minutes in Access. Let me tell you the database part of LibreOffice SUCKS. You can’t even import csv’s! Best you can do is copy paste cells into fields and Hope all the formatting and data types work. And connecting to other external data sources is an incredible pain. I found MS Office on sale for $35 and threw LibreOffice in the trash where it belongs.


Come visit us over at !bbs@lemmy.sdf.org ! Would love to build up a community around this.


I work at a top 10 US financial institution. All devs/engineers and ux folks get issued macbooks as standard. Probably been two years now that this has been the case. Being able to use all the unix command line stuff, along with more reliable machines, longer expected life, and higher productivity (those M series processors rock) make it a no-brainer. HP zbooks only go out to the people that specifically request them or are reliant on the few apps that do not have either a web based option or macos equivalent (its going to be the web based option that solves this over time I expect. Prob not a lot of incoming ports).


non-technical people looking to use an alternative operating system

Umm, you don’t see the oxymoron there?


Family group chat and shared albums in iOS. Solve 90% of the needs.



Since 1999 I’m only on my second Brother Laser printer. They are champs and 3rd party toner is inexpensive.


Have you ever seen that movie Don’t Look up? It’s a great watch. Even in the face of a planet destroying comet heading for earth, the conservative were all “You know what, I’m FOR all the jobs the comet will provide! Don’t look up! Don’t look up!”




Those plus Tropico. The first one. Scratches the same itch as RCT for me.


I bought at the same time as you. Waited it out. for me, it was pretty true to the pen and paper game - which I enjoyed. And I loved the story. 10/10 for me.I rarely stick with games. I’m not much of a gamer. The only games I’ve played through start to finish are Super Mario 64, Neverwinter Nights (PC), CP2077, and Hogwarts Legacy. I tend to play sports or shooters, so it takes a lot for me to stick something out to completion.


I though about that the first time I saw Requiem for a Dream, and then suddenly thought to myself. It’s not actually mindblowing. It’s just a formulaic, cookie cutter story of a bunch of people doing drugs, I kind of think it’s really overrated from a critical standpoint now. But I did get an initial shock.


If WinNuke rings a bell. You remember the fun :-)

Open a small program. Type in the IP address. Click Nuke. Target PC immediately shuts down. While it’s rebooting you grab it’s IP address as your own so it can’t rejoin the network. Worked great in a building where every machine had a predictable fixed ip. Some good teenage mayhem.


I have Fedora on my spare laptop just for kicks. The thing that irkedme was that I had to install Gnome-Tweaks just to get basic functionality like a minimize button in windows. And Dash to Dock to be able to see the dock without backing out to the workspace view. And I still can’t figure out how to just start in workspace 1 instead of making me select a workspace on startup. It’s irritating to use before I even get going.


macOS for both work and personal (Personal M1 Mini, Work issued MBP).


Well for one thing Apple rather famously slows down its old phones and lost a lawsuit over it. Apple has plenty of merits but longevity is definitely not one of them.

This is so false, and has been debunked so many times that anyone still repeating it is simply a liar.

Batteries are consumable items. A great analogy anyone can relate to is car batteries. Anyone with a car knows the battery goes bad. Batteries wear out. A car battery that works fine in the summer may have a lot of trouble cranking over in the winter under the conditions and extra load of a cold engine full of sludgy oil.

The phone battery is no different. Overtime it starts to go bad. What Apple did, was determine through software when a phone battery could no longer support a phone running at full blast. They INCREASED LONGEVITY of the device, by throttling the speed. By making it run slower, it was less demanding and still would work - where it otherwise would have been prone to random shutdowns and crashes because of the degraded battery. This was a much better user experience. They could have skipped this altogether, and people would have just bought a new device. Instead this software throttling made the device last even longer. In fact, laptops have been doing this for decades. Should Apple have told folks? Sure. But anyone presenting this as a profit motive or forced obsolescence is deluded.



I’m also late to the party. But I’ve been on SDF for ages so I always try out everything they offer.


The thing with a CU is it’s great until something goes wrong. Although anecdotal, these are all real world trouble I’ve had with ours: 1) Need to have safe deposit box drilled. Took over 6 months to get it scheduled and repeated visits to the branch manager. 2) Had a double post of a debit. Not a biggie, but no 24 hour customer service (or weekend service unless you come in person). Had it been fraud or a huge double post I would have been out of luck until the next business day. And would likely have had to go in person. 3) Ordering checks required an in person visit. 4) Changing out an old secondary signer for a new one required an appointment that took several weeks to book (apparently no one there works full time). 5) Interest on our money market is worse than the local big banks.