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Keith Whyte retooteado
Keith Whyte retooteado

“The #fediverse is like #email.”

Yes.

Now read this and understand it:

“I have been self-hosting my email since I got my first broadband connection at home in 1999 … But my emails are just not delivered anymore. I might as well not have an email server.

Email is now an oligopoly, a service gatekept by a few big companies which does not follow the principles of net neutrality … I lost. We lost. One cannot reliably deploy independent email servers.“

cfenollosa.com/blog/after-self

Via @cancel

Keith Whyte retooteado

Poor countries are not “under-developed”, they are over-exploited.

Keith Whyte retooteado

@jakintosh well, we had this vanguard in the days when all social media was federated, Usenet, email, Inc, etc, and where it led was here.

Keith Whyte retooteado

💬 It’s going from bad to worse for Meta. 
"Meta faces €390 million in fines and must find a new legal route to targeted ads, while the Irish regulator is suing the EU data protection body over claims of ‘overreach.’ "
politico.eu/article/meta-fina-

Keith Whyte retooteado

Yeah, it's like, why even bother? We all know Big Brother is watching, so why not just embrace it? Let's make our own search engine and make it better than theirs! Or, you know, just go about our lives and do something more productive. #YOLO!

Keith Whyte retooteado
Keith Whyte retooteado

the sad reality of open source software development

In short: folks love the amazing decentralised encrypted comms utopia of Matrix. But organisations also love that they can use it without having to pay anyone to develop or maintain it. This is completely unsustainable, and Element is now literally unable to fund the entirety of the Matrix Foundation on behalf of everyone else - and has had to lay off some of the folks working on the core team as a result.

matrix.org/blog/2022/12/25/the

Keith Whyte retooteado

"mastodon would be a lot cooler if you were more analytics-friendly" is the "you'd be a lot prettier if you smiled" of the fediverse

Keith Whyte retooteado

I think I am ready to leave #academia.
I’ll add this to my #NewYearResolutions list, which I have never made before. There’s always a first time.

"The diverging paths of life are hidden under the fog of the future, you can't plan the route and then fail to follow it, because there is no map..."

On setting a for the , or even just for the

invidious.fdn.fr/watch?v=NVGuF

(via @the_duke - video link modified)

It's that time of the year to think about .

Rather than talking to the voice in my head about it 🙂, to come up with things that probably last till 3pm on Jan 1, how about we do some collective brainstorming and come up with some (critical) mass action!

Who's game to ?
Proposal: discuss ways to reduce screen time, as in

* Try to make one day per 7 days, not necessarily the same day every week, which is 100% computer and device free.

Keith Whyte retooteado

I really think we need to reject the term "content creator."

That phrase is used by people who aim to Monetize™ us without needing to care about what it is we create. A "content creator" is there to make the stuff that attracts people so they can be fed advertising.

Call us what we are. Artists. Essayists. Film makers. Authors. Photographers. And so many others. We are creators, yes, but what we create has so much value beyond filling otherwise empty space on a website.

#MakeArtNotContent

Keith Whyte retooteado
Keith Whyte retooteado

3/ The few people who were present at the expert session also seemed swayed by the “empty cafés” argument. But I think I succeeded in letting them at least consider there might be an alternative.

I told them about the point of view of a civil servant of the municipality of #Rotterdam. He says that cities used to be physical-social spaces, but are now turning into physical-social-digital spaces. This means that cities need to manage two (!) new dimensions: physical-digital and #digital-#social.

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Keith Whyte retooteado

2/ It annoyed me for two reasons. First, governments do have this bad habit of building empty cafés. For example, the European Commission hosted an almost €400k party in the #metaverse two weeks ago... to which only five people showed up (short article linked)!

Second, and more importantly, this does not mean that governments need to work with Big Tech. It's such a lazy conclusion.

politico.eu/article/eu-threw-e

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Keith Whyte retooteado

1/ What is the digital equivalent of a park?

The city council of #Amsterdam held an expert session on “the digital city” almost a week ago. I was present as a member of the public.

One of the experts invited was a consultant from Deloitte. He was making the point that Amsterdam should not reject working with Big Tech companies in building the #digital layer of the #city.

He said something along the lines of: “because governments end up building empty cafés”. This annoyed me.

Keith Whyte retooteado
Keith Whyte retooteado

Well, if you're interested in such things, I wrote up a case study on the Raspberry Pi thing that happened yesterday/today

eiara.nz/posts/2022/Dec/09/a-c

Keith Whyte retooteado

I tend to avoid boycotts because I don't believe that, in most of the cases, individual actions solve anything at scale.

But, in the case of #RaspberryPi, I regretfully feel compelled to move towards that stance. Today's spycop case has definitely been the last nail in the coffin - not much for the fact itself, but for their unprofessional reactions: I was really shocked to read words as strong and arguments as weak as those of an enraged teenager coming from the official account of such a respected company. Blocking, mocking and bullying those who disagree or criticize in a civilized way goes against everything our community believes in.

But I'm not dropping RPi just because of this. Unfortunately this wasn't just a random incident. It's been the continuation of a disturbing trend in the way RPi manages their communications. I've seen them mock the makers' community as "people who only build useless gadgets for their homes", implying that they are mostly deaf to our stances because we are not the ones generating a stable revenue stream for them.

This is toxic alpha/technobro arrogance that I would have expected from Steve Ballmer or Elon Musk. Not by someone that built their own success on inclusiveness, fairness, and a vast community of enthusiastic makers.

Therefore I won't buy any more of their products, I'll slowly remove all the references to RPi in the documentation of #Platypush, and stop advising their products. And I'm saying this as someone who has ~20 RPis in his home, has been using their products since the first batch of RPi1 was released, has written a book and countless articles on it. I'm not the first random hater.

Since many people are asking for alternatives in these hours, I'll put together my little personal list of alternative brands (solely based on products that I use or have tried). Take two things into account though:

- Most of the products on this list assume that you may not be scared from installing and configuring a Linux distro, or deal with sparse documentation or buggy software. Unfortunately, it's hard to match the level of "newbie-readiness" that RPi built over the years (thanks mostly to the community of makers and volunteers that they are now deriding).

- When it comes to pricing, again, it's hard to compete with RPi. Even if the RPi4 sells at >$100 nowadays, that's still quite cheaper than the next cheapest board.

Coming to the list:

ARM-based:

- BananaPi (these are personally my favourite RPi alternative products)

- OrangePi (the default software may not be very stable though)

- Odroid (most of their products are actually good enough to run even Android or Windows)

- Asus Tinkerboard (a RPi clone that for me represented one of the best drop-in alternatives to RPi)

- Beagleboard (I'm impressed that they have managed to nail an AI-oriented board with a bunch of cores for <$200)

x86-based:

- DeskMini (a producer of miniPC for all the budgets)

- LattePanda (one of the coolest x86 boards out there)

- Intel TUC (probably the most flexible option, and many other miniPC are based on it)

- Anything by System76 or Tuxedo (amazing products, solid Linux support, but pricey tag)

I'm personally waiting for the moment where RISC-V can really take over, but unfortunately at this stage we've still got some PoC boards and not impressive software support.

And I personally think that we need to build a new user-friendly alternative to the RPi: there's plenty of products out there for many of the geeks among us who know how to get Linux installed the manual way. But not many that either come with a good maintained OS pre-installed, or have something as simple as the RPiOS installer.

What solutions alternative to RPi are you folks considering?

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