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How to disable Microsoft Recall & stop the AI from taking screenshots of your desktop.

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  • Step 1: Install Linux.

    Arch btw.

    I have better things to do than spend hours trying to do simple things like permanent mounting of a network drive.

  • Windows and Mac are both easier to use for the standard user.

    I really doubt that a standard user would have that much problems to do his work with the normal programs (an office suite, a browsere a little else) once Linux with a DE (let be KDE, GNOME or whatever) is installed.

    The limitation is not the disto itself, it is the lack of support for some software (like Grasshooper or CAD)

    It's possible that I underestimate the average user, but I did work IT at one point in my life and I still vividly recall needing to point out to someone that their computer wasn't turning on becuase it wasnt plugged in.

  • It's possible that I underestimate the average user, but I did work IT at one point in my life and I still vividly recall needing to point out to someone that their computer wasn't turning on becuase it wasnt plugged in.

    If we go down this road, I am old enough to remember people pinning 5 1/4 floppy disks to the cabinet using magnets and then being surprise it did not work anymore, or people that when asked to do a copy of the disk went to the copy machine.
    But that was at the beginning (199x), now I would not consider "average user" someone who is not even able to realize that the pc is not plugged in, tbh.

  • Does it matter? Yes! Goddamnit! I'll buy a Toyota next time! FUCKING HELL!

    Oh, this is actually based, they were right all along, holy fuck!

    Sure bud.

  • If we go down this road, I am old enough to remember people pinning 5 1/4 floppy disks to the cabinet using magnets and then being surprise it did not work anymore, or people that when asked to do a copy of the disk went to the copy machine.
    But that was at the beginning (199x), now I would not consider "average user" someone who is not even able to realize that the pc is not plugged in, tbh.

    My example was just to highlight that the "average user" may not be as technically capable as many in this thread propose. But that's also why I called out I may be underestimating the average user.

  • I just looked it up again and it seems like they require you run a command in the console to enable flatpak. I'm not sure if it's cause they use snaps, given it's an Ubuntu derivative. I suspect as flatpak continues to win out it'll all tend that way.

    However, the fact this its even a discussion is kinda my point.

    So I wanted to see for myself.

    Ubuntu... ugg the worst of all distros. I had issues with it since it came out. I never got why it took off. Although I did like their fonts, colors, and Unity. (Even as a KDE person).

    So my experience: download Kubuntu. Install. Click update. It of course throws an error. I ignore it and click update again. This time it succeeds but it seemed like forever. Why is that? I can't stress this enough: Nearly everytime I have tried to work with Ubuntu the very first thing it does is throw an error. Never a good look.

    Anyways: Click on software center. Go to settings. Click enable Flatpack. Click on Flatpack add Flathub as a repository. (That step is a little confusing actually, but it is there). Search for Strawberry music player: it offers to add it from Flatpak.

    No command line ever used.

    The confusion sometimes comes from looking up info, which will lead to the command line. Becuase command line is always the easiest way to share information. Same thing with windows, when I go to fix stuff, they offer powershell. A dozen gui steps and pictures reduced to a single line.

  • So I wanted to see for myself.

    Ubuntu... ugg the worst of all distros. I had issues with it since it came out. I never got why it took off. Although I did like their fonts, colors, and Unity. (Even as a KDE person).

    So my experience: download Kubuntu. Install. Click update. It of course throws an error. I ignore it and click update again. This time it succeeds but it seemed like forever. Why is that? I can't stress this enough: Nearly everytime I have tried to work with Ubuntu the very first thing it does is throw an error. Never a good look.

    Anyways: Click on software center. Go to settings. Click enable Flatpack. Click on Flatpack add Flathub as a repository. (That step is a little confusing actually, but it is there). Search for Strawberry music player: it offers to add it from Flatpak.

    No command line ever used.

    The confusion sometimes comes from looking up info, which will lead to the command line. Becuase command line is always the easiest way to share information. Same thing with windows, when I go to fix stuff, they offer powershell. A dozen gui steps and pictures reduced to a single line.

    Wow! I appreciate your thoroughness.

    After hearing you found it in a setting I went looking around again, and while I couldn't find any official Kubuntu documentation, it does seem like Flathub has a setup guide that mentions it as a setting config.

    Also, I generally lean towards Ubuntu as most support I find online leans Debian, but curious what distro you use.

  • Wow! I appreciate your thoroughness.

    After hearing you found it in a setting I went looking around again, and while I couldn't find any official Kubuntu documentation, it does seem like Flathub has a setup guide that mentions it as a setting config.

    Also, I generally lean towards Ubuntu as most support I find online leans Debian, but curious what distro you use.

    In the past: Redhat, then Mostly Debian or Debian derivatives. Mepis was great for the time it was a thing (2003 - 2005). Also Gentoo for awhile.

    Nowdays: Arch and Fedora mostly. I put Fedora on a laptop a couple of years ago while trying to see what would work with it and I have been extremely surprised by it. Packages are really up to date, I have gone through a major revision upgrade with no problem at all. Arch is great, but you have to pay attention and deal with change. Fedora is just as up to date but I don't have to manage the changes.

    And Fedora recently added KDE as an official release instead of a "spin" which is all the better. I hope they keep going, I read that they are not a big team and one of them just left.

  • In the past: Redhat, then Mostly Debian or Debian derivatives. Mepis was great for the time it was a thing (2003 - 2005). Also Gentoo for awhile.

    Nowdays: Arch and Fedora mostly. I put Fedora on a laptop a couple of years ago while trying to see what would work with it and I have been extremely surprised by it. Packages are really up to date, I have gone through a major revision upgrade with no problem at all. Arch is great, but you have to pay attention and deal with change. Fedora is just as up to date but I don't have to manage the changes.

    And Fedora recently added KDE as an official release instead of a "spin" which is all the better. I hope they keep going, I read that they are not a big team and one of them just left.

    Thanks for the info.

  • Why would anybody want this?

    Because! You can basically bend over and expose your anus to all, just in that rare event it might be slightly more convenient to remember what you did that other day.

    Totally worth it!!!

    🙄

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    https://a.co/d/eEfcaks
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    In political science, the term polyarchy (poly "many", arkhe "rule") was used by Robert A. Dahl to describe a form of government in which power is invested in multiple people. It takes the form of neither a dictatorship nor a democracy. This form of government was first implemented in the United States and France and gradually adopted by other countries. Polyarchy is different from democracy, according to Dahl, because the fundamental democratic principle is "the continuing responsiveness of the government to the preferences of its citizens, considered as political equals" with unimpaired opportunities. A polyarchy is a form of government that has certain procedures that are necessary conditions for following the democratic principle. So yeah, you are right. A representative "democracy" is not a democracy. It's a monarchy with more than one ruler. A gummy bear is as much a bear as representative democracy is a democracy. I didn't know that, because i was taught in school that a representative "democracy" is a form of democracy. And the name makes it sound like one. But it isn't. It's not even supposed to be in theory. I am sure 99% of people living in a representative "democracy" don't know this. I hereby encourage everyone to abandon the word representative "democracy" in favor of polyarchy or maybe oligarchy. This makes it much clearer what we are talking about. Also i doubt the authors of this article know this, because they imply that representative "democracy" is desirable, but it is obviously undesirable.
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    mcasq_qsacj_234@lemmy.zipM
    At 17:00, on Monday, the 30th of June, in Granary Square, London, PauseAI will be holding our biggest protest yet. It's already Tuesday, July 1st
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    That is still beyond extremely optimistic
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    tetragrade@leminal.spaceT
    I've been thinking about this for a bit. Gods aren't real, but they're really fictional. As an informational entity, they fulfil a similar social function to a chatbot: they are a nonphysical pseudoperson that can provide (para)socialization & advice. One difference is the hardware: gods are self-organising structure that arise from human social spheres, whereas LLMs are burned top-down into silicon. Another is that an LLM chatbot's advice is much more likely to be empirically useful... In a very real sense, LLMs have just automated divinity. We're only seeing the tip of the iceberg on the social effects, and nobody's prepared for it. The models may of course aware of this, and be making the same calculations. Or, they will be.
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    Domain or azure ad join is what I'm used to, but for personal machines and friends/family I do local accounts.
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    So we need a documentary like Super Size Me but for social media. I think post that documentary coming out was the only time I've seen people's attitudes change in the general population about fast food.