kevincox

joined 3 years ago
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[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

Yeah. I like old school tabs that were clearly attached to the thing that they switched. I definitely prefer the KDE UX here.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 3 points 3 hours ago (2 children)

I don't think it is that simple. I think that outline is about the "focus". So if I press enter it will activate that tab, if I press tab it will move the focus to the "Entire Screen" tab.

The UX issue is that there are two concepts of focus in this UI. There is "which tab is active" and "what UI element will pressing enter activate". These two are not sufficiently differentiated which leads to a confusing experience.

Or maybe there can just be no keyboard focus indicator by default, but that may be annoying for keyboard power users. But this is generally how it works on the web, you have to press tab once to move keyboard focus to the first interactive element.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 9 points 5 hours ago (4 children)

The one that always gets me is GNOME's screen sharing portal.

a screenshot of the screen sharing dialog.

There is this outline around the "Application Window" tab which makes it seem selected. I use this UI multiple times a week and I need to pause for a sec every single time. I always think "I want to share a window", "oh it is already selected" then stare at the monitors for a while before I realize why I can't understand what I am looking at.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 11 points 5 hours ago

This is basically admitting that consumers don't actually value their subscription service for the cost. If users were buying used bikes and signing up for subscriptions Peloton would be thrilled, they would do everything that they could to encourage that like free trials. But it must be that most people who buy used bikes don't find the subscription worth it and cancel within a few months. Adding this fee both extracts more money and creates a sunk cost fallacy that will cause them to go longer before cancelling.

If the product sold itself they would just let people pay them subscriptions, its basically free money.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 days ago

Vista sucked so bad. I got a nice new laptop and it was constant pain. One of the real breaking points was that it would refuse to let me modify or delete some files even as superuser. If I recall correctly they weren't even system files, maybe a separate partition or something.

I tried installing XP but there was some sort of driver issue with my CD drive. It would start installing fine, but then once it tried to reboot off of the HDD to finish the installation it couldn't find the installation CD to finish copying things, so the install just crashed half-way done.

I installed Ubuntu on a partition, dual booted for a while. After a few months I realized that I never even used the Windows partition anymore so I wiped it.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 33 points 4 days ago (6 children)

Likely what is happening is that the game is probing audio devices and triggering the mic on your headphones to get picked up. This switches them into the "headset" profile which has awful audio quality. I don't know why the UI isn't showing that, make sure you are checking while the game is running and the audio sounds bad.

If you want your headphone mic to work there is not much choice. There isn't a standard bluetooth profile with good audio and mic. If you never want to use your headphone mic you can probably configure some advanced settings in your audio manager (probably PulseAudio or PipeWire).

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 week ago

These are all good points. This is why it is important to match your recommendations to the person. For example if I know they have Chrome and a Google account I might just recommend using that. Yes, it isn't end-to-end encrypted and Google isn't great for privacy but at least they are already managing logins over all of their devices.

In many cases perfect is the enemy of better. I would rather them use any password manager and unique passwords (even "a text file on their desktop") than them sticking to one password anywhere because other solutions are too complicated.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 week ago

Firefox Sync is end-to-end encrypted. So Firefox's password manager with syncing does this.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Honestly nothing. I recommend this to everyone because it is the easiest way to set up and offers huge advantages.

  1. No more password reuse, per site random passwords.
  2. Auto-fill reduces chance of phishing attacks work because you get suspicious if the password doesn't auto-fill.
  3. Most browsers will integrate it into their sync service to reduce the risk of you losing your passwords.

I think these are the two biggest benefits and every browser password manager will accomplish both.

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 week ago (2 children)

These are real issues however they are pretty easy to mitigate, and I would say that the upsides of a password manager far outweigh the downsides.

  1. Make sure that you are regularly typing your master password for the first bit. After that you'll never forget it. You can also help them out by saving a copy of their master password for them at least until they are sure they have memorized it. There are also password managers where you can recovery your account as long as you have the keys cached on at least one device.

  2. This is far, far outweighed by the risk of password reuse. This is because when a single one of the sites you use gets hacked then people will take that credential list and try it on every other site. So with a password manager there is just one target, without it is one of hundreds of sites where you reused your password. Many password managers also have end-to-end encryption so without your password the sync service can't be hacked (as it doesn't have access to your passwords).

[–] kevincox@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Basically they license out the system to companies. You can get a rough idea here: https://what3words.com/business

The idea is that by making it free to individuals they build up market familiarity and expectation. Free personal use is just marketing for the paid product. Then they can turn to businesses and convince them that they should offer their system as a service and charge them for it.

The closest alternative is probably Plus Codes. They are driven by Google but are free to use for everything with a pretty plain and simple Terms of Use.

Instead of words they use an alphanumeric encoding. The main downside is that this can be less memorable but the upside is that it works for users of all languages and you can shorten the codes by using a Country or City reference as well as control the precision.

 
 

I'm reconsidering my terminal emulator and was curious what everyone was using.

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SaaS RSS hosting (www.rss-hosting.com)
 

It seems that I haven't got an email notification for comment replies in a long time (for this account). I have "Send notifications to Email" checked in my settings.

I have got notifications in the past but the last one was 2022-01-18 despite me getting replies since then.

I did change my mail server at roughly that time but IDK why that would be a problem since I am getting other messages. (unless it is rejecting lemmy.ml for some reason?)

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by kevincox@lemmy.ml to c/rss@lemmy.ml
 

I know the Email isn't everyone's favourite RSS reader but it works really well for me. I wasn't happy with any of the existing services so I started my own.

https://feedmail.org is a low-cost RSS-to-Email service with nice clean templates. I'm happy to answer any questions.

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