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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Algorithmic patents amount to patenting maths which, by very longstanding precedence, is not a thing, for good reason.

    You absolutely can patent “math” (well, more like physics) IRL. What matters though is that the invention actually has to be novel and non-obvious, and IMO it should also be harder to patent if it’s in a segment like software where costs of development, iteration and “research” are generally extremely cheap. Like, it should have a way higher bar for the “novelness”.

    And I would not allow any kind of software design patent (use copyright or trademark to protect that).










  • Amju Wolf@pawb.socialtoLinux@lemmy.mlGNOME 47.beta Released
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    2 months ago

    I may understand “opinionated” differently from you, but the main issue is that when you do want to change something, you can’t. Or it’s some unsupported hack, or (best case) you flip some hidden configuration variable (that will probably break with the next release).

    KDE is well configured from the get go as well, you don’t have to change anything and it will work well. But if you do decide that you don’t like some of their defaults, you can tweak many aspects of it.


  • Amju Wolf@pawb.socialtoLinux@lemmy.mlGNOME 47.beta Released
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    3 months ago

    It wouldn’t really be an issue if you didn’t need an extension for every single basic functionality…

    Because of how stupidly opinionated Gnome is I switched to KDE a year or so ago and have been extremely happy with it. And what do you know I don’t even need any extensions, because sane stuff like tray icons are builtin.

    I do use an extension for distributing windows in custom areas though, and it didn’t even break throughout the (I believe) 2 large updates there were since I started using it.


  • That’s technically true, but the apps “everyone” has are the opposite to that, and people are used to it and don’t really seem to complain. So if Facebook, Tiktok, Twitter, Amazon, Spotify and Aliexpress each do their own (garbage) thing, it shows other brands they can do that too, and they kinda ruin it for everyone. Basically the apps you spend most time in are probably like that, and it’s a shitty experience.




  • This means that it is impossible for them to make a patch or PR because it would conflict with the projects licence and fact its open source.

    That’s not how it works. It just means the company owns the code for all intents and purposes, which also means that if they tell you that you can release it under a FOSS license / contribute to someone else’s project, you can absolutely do that (they effectively grant you the license to use “their” code that you wrote under a FOSS license somewhere else).


  • That’s never going to happen, and the reasons are twofold:

    Brands want to push their own style on people, to make themselves recognizable, and to push their ideas about UX to their users (because they obviously know better than the OS/DE/compositor/whatever people).

    It’s easier and cheaper to build a web app, because there are so many web developers. It also usually allows you to give an “app” to people who want that, while giving a (perhaps somewhat limited) browser version to everyone else, reaching the maximum amount of users while maintaining only a single codebase and keeping everything more or less cohesive and looking the same.




  • That’s only true in theory, and if you are actually capable of doing that.

    The reality is that most software was already barely working when it was written, it’s poorly documented and if you try to work on it without any help you might as well write it on your own from scratch.

    You will also encounter incompatibilities, missing dependencies, etc.

    Don’t get me wrong, I love FOSS, I know all the advantages and it’s definitely better than the alternative. But it’s also not a silver bullet. Though this case is pretty cut and dry.