@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

noahf

@noahf@hachyderm.io

simulated walnut-grain finish

Older than the Internet, older than Watergate. Currently reside near Seattle.

Works on free software, vintage watch repair.
Expect me to be pro union, acab, blm, antifa, lgbtqia+, sw rights, vaccines, science, and socialist or further left policy.

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

lauren, (edited ) to random
@lauren@mastodon.laurenweinstein.org avatar

***** A few words about Google's future *****

At I/O today, the firm is publicizing an array of new projects. Some of them seem flashy and relatively useless, others seem like they could be very worthwhile. How many of either category will still exist five years from now is of course a crucial question given Google's history.

But Google I/O is merely the gloss, in many respects what has become the so-called "lipstick on the pig". Because Google executives have permitted their race for the golden and in many respects false prize of "Artificial Intelligence" to cloud their vision, and to permit an increasing number of basic services that billions of Google users depend on every day to, in effect, rot away.

The collapse of Google Search, once a global technological wonder, has been profound. Often incorrect or even inane generative AI responses now often supersede links to the very sites from which Google is obtaining the raw material for their AI systems (usually without any form of compensation, while driving down user click-throughs).

A similar decline is obvious in various other core Google services.

Of great continuing concern to me is the very foundation of how virtually all Google users access most Google services -- Google accounts themselves. I continue to be flooded by persons who have problems with their Google accounts through no fault of their own, including lockouts and permanently lost crucial personal data, with Google's automated systems providing them with no resolutions, only horrific frustration. Google's frankly poorly conceived and rushed implementation of passkeys -- and the pushing of users to them who typically do not understand them and have more problems as a result -- is making matters even worse. What good are fancy new services when your Google account needed to use them may lock you out at any time with effectively no genuine ability to appeal?

Some groups of Google users -- such as seniors and other users with special needs who may not be technologically sophisticated -- are especially affected by these sorts of problems and suffer mightily as a result. I don't think Google actually "hates" these users -- I think Google simply does not want to make the minimal efforts required to help them, basically treating them with much the same disdain as you might flick a bug off your shirt.

There is so much that would be relatively simple for Google to do that would vastly improve the user experience for these users and others -- but Google seems to only care about the majority, and if you're in the minority, well, if you swing slowly in the wind locked out of your account, too bad for you. Google's got other fish to fry to keep the profit centers humming.

I could go on, but you get the gist. I don't hate Google. I still have major respect for the firm and especially for Googlers (Google employees) in general. But I am enormously disappointed with the direction executives are now taking the firm, and this seems to be getting worse at an accelerating rate.

And that's very, very sad to see. -L

noahf,
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

@mark @lauren
Google locked me out of my Chromebook once and I was unable to recover. I will never use a Chromebook again.

mattsheffield, to emacs
@mattsheffield@mastodon.social avatar

A question for the community: Is it possible to use the Tramp feature to connect to a remote Emacs daemon? I ask because I have a file which I always have open on a remote pseudo-tty, but sometimes it would be nice to use my desktop Emacs with its nice proportional fonts and custom sizes to edit.

I want to connect to the same remote daemon so I can see unsaved changes and not have to worry about sync.

noahf,
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

@mattsheffield
Run a vnc server with emacs connected to that display.
You can connect to it remotely using any vnc client.
It's more network efficient than using X directly.

There isn't any way of indirectly editing a buffer in one emacs process from another emacs process. You need access to a frame from the original process.

noahf,
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

@mattsheffield
I don't want to second-guess your workflow but I'm curious why you would leave edits unsaved, at least significant ones. Autosave is partial protection for crash recovery but generally anything not committed to disk is as good as gone.

chandlerc, to random
@chandlerc@hachyderm.io avatar

Saw this again, and it remains excellent.

noahf,
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

@chandlerc
I aways wondered if geese ever experience gander dysphoria.

noahf, to random
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

Now that android lets you turn off notifications from apps, it really pisses me off how many of them persistently nag you to turn them back on in the app. I turned them off because I didn't want them, please fuck off already.

noahf, to random
@noahf@hachyderm.io avatar

An interactive, branching book that teaches boolean logic and binary arithmetic, called Twos Your Own Adventure.

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