mholiv

joined 2 years ago
[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago

Different customers are dumb in different ways and different customers have different personalities.

If I sent a template email I would probably offend most of my customers. Lol.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Depends on the email. Sometimes it’s needed.

I can spend 10-20 min writing an email that basically says “no your idea is dumb and won’t work” to customers in such a way where by the end of it they agree with me.

It can take a bit of effort but with high stakes communication it’s needed.

If you’re just sending an email to your teacher or whatever it doesn’t really matter.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Exactly this. Like someone will post an article from RT saying that Ukraine grids up babies for fun. If you ask if RT is really the best source you get a response like “RT cites its sources. If you don’t believe it you can read the sources!!”

If you mention that the sources aren’t reliable or question anything you get sealioned hard.

I would recommend making an account on any instance not ending in .ml or bear.net That way you can have actual conversations without having to wade through the nonsense.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

It matters though. Like in Germany telegram is associated with hard right wings groups. Telling someone you use telegram makes them assume that you are a part of hard right ideologies.

It’s a shame as the telegram app is really snappy. You always have to say that you are on telegram but are not right wing. Even then people can be suspicious.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Text speak mostly came from typing on dumb phone number pads to enter text. Like if you wanted to type “hi” you would have to enter “4-4 pause 4-4-4” As you might expect 5 putting presses with a pause between some of them just to say “hi” got painful. Thus the shortening.

Text messages were always charged per message. But each message was limited to 160 ascii characters or less if you were using other encodings. You could send 1 character or 160 characters but it cost 20 cents (at least where I grew up) either way.

This is all separate from l33t speak which is a whole different thing.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago

Very much so.

They are paying for the service and expect appropriate treatment.

Companies generally frown upon their data being taken. It’s only consumers who use “free” services that really suffer from this. After all, if you’re not paying you are the product.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Out of curiosity. What X11 features are you missing in a Wayland system?

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Thank god yes.

Keep your init scripts. Unit files are so much cleaner.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 13 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

It’s only weird because it’s not CarPlay or Android Auto. As soon as you have one of those it suddenly becomes nice and useful.

Then it’s a nice big touch screen that has everything you need from your phone.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Take a look into openstack. It has most of this baked in. Keystone is the way you can use the same APIs across multiple providers.

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Think of it like the flooded house analogy. They could paint the dry wall while tearing it out at the same time. But why would they?

[–] mholiv@lemmy.world 7 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

They’re not refusing. They’re actually doing the opposite. But they needed to get their house in order first.

The 3.0 upgrade was the result of the getting their house in order and modernizing. Doing cosmetic changed before hand would have made no sense because those changes would have been thrown away when they would have to modernize things anyways.

I think I have an analogy.

Gimp was like an old American style wooden house that was flooded. After the water recedes you could try to make things look nicer by plastering and painting the walls etc. But as goes with flooded houses if you do this the mold will rot everything out.

In order to save a flooded house you need to remove all the dry wall and use fans to dry out the internals. Once things are dry then you can plaster and repaint things.

Gimp 3.0 was them ripping out dry wall and air drying the internals. Now that that is done it now makes sense to clean up the UI.

If you clean up the UI before you dry the walls out it’s just a waste of time because those improvements would need to be ripped out with the dry walls always.

It’s not perfect as far as an analogy goes but it’s close. Gimp should have never let the house flood in the first place. (Analogy breaks down here a bit). But since they did. They needed to fix the fundamental before it would be worth fixing the UI.

This all being said they could at this point genuinely refuse to change things UI wise. I hope they choose to pull a Blender or Krita but they don’t have to.

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