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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 10th, 2023

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  • I’m using Feedly Classic on iOS. I would like to move off of it, but I have yet to find any other RSS client which presents the articles in a card like view which you can vertically swipe through to mark them as read.

    Feedly themselves abandoned this UI for an infinite scrolling list on their main app. All other RSS clients I tried have this similar UI, which I feel is really poor.


  • kayazere@feddit.nltoTechnology@lemmy.worldNever Forgive Them
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    11 days ago

    The root of the problem is growth and profit seeking is what is steering the tech research and production. Which just leads to an endless churn of useless software and hardware updates.

    Desktop OSes peeked around Windows 7. macOS hasn’t had a useful feature since dark mode. The UIs have only gone down hill with trying to force them to be mobile friendly and flat.

    The iPhone peeked around iPhone 8/iPhone X depending on if you liked the notch/FaceID or not. I’ve seen no useful features since.

    Companies must make “progress” each year by releasing worse user hostile software updates and force device upgrades through planned obsolescence.




  • This would apply to all consumer electronics besides smartphones, such as smart TVs, gaming consoles, etc.

    Android has problems with how each device uses a forked kernel with vendor binary blobs only working for that specific forked kernel. PostmarketOS is trying to avoid these issues by upstreaming the drivers so they can be maintained normally when the kernel changes.

    Yes having a trusted entity maintain the software is a big problem.

    But giving the option to install your own software would be a big step in keeping the devices in use.


  • Planned Obsolescence is a problem across all consumer electronics that depend on the software being updated. It’s not limited to Big Tech.

    The only way I see to solve it is to force vendors to release hardware specs and unlock bootloaders so you can install your own software on it.

    An even better solution would be to force vendors to release their software when the hardware is end of life via their planned obsolescence.

    It’s great to see small advances in right to repair for hardware, such as replacing the battery or access to new parts, but those don’t help when you are stuck on an outdated OS version.


  • The EU actually didn’t force them to implement RCS. Apple did it themselves to try and avoid an regulatory/antitrust scrutiny.

    At the moment I think having RCS on iPhone is worse than if Apple was forced to open up iMessage to other platforms. RCS on Android is basically controlled by Google and you can’t use it on custom roms. Google also runs the RCS backend that most carriers rely on (rather than implementing their own). So if you are trying to avoid Google’s spyware, you can’t use RCS to message iPhone users.