ninthant

joined 3 weeks ago
[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

I like your idea of setting self goals with a built-in reminder system. This is a mindset I’ve been trying to adopt more in my life and it’s been very successful when applied.

However I also want to counterbalance that against an impact of replacing my existing device which is not compatible with those and is a perfectly usable machine. Particularly because of the costs and the waste from upgrading devices before it’s needed.

But maybe I’m under-thinking this because of inertial and it just being easy to punt it to another day. I could sell my current device and buy a used compatible device and this wouldn’t be an excessive cost nor generation of electronic waste

Thank you for the push.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 3 points 5 days ago

I’ve used Linux since 1996, so that doesn’t bother me in the slightest

I should have mentioned that but I’m a bit self-conscious about being the “I use arch btw” people. Even though I do use Arch, btw.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Yes your perspective on this matches the results of my research as well.

It’s a very interesting project to watch and hopefully upstart companies around the world will see this as an opportunity to serve their domestic markets.

But right now today it’s extraordinarily expensive for limited performance. I can live with limited performance but those price are way too high to consider for anything not directly related to development of the platform itself.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 days ago

Indeed but for my use cases of a headless server this might be just fine.

The problem is that it’s quite expensive because the cost includes of the screen and camera and components i don’t want, but hey it exists and that’s the furthest I’ve got right now.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 days ago (4 children)

This looks very promising thanks for sharing it.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 days ago

Appreciate the tip thanks

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 5 days ago (2 children)

That’s not a terrible idea, I bet I could strip the mainboard out and use that.

This is a really solid idea, thank you.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 6 days ago

The risk of relying on devices which perform auto-update functionality or could hide backdoors are absolutely a legitimate security vulnerability.

Companies must comply with legal orders given to them by their government. So if the government of, say, China or America demands that their firms enable surveillance or sabotage either against individuals or widespread; those companies will comply.

So yes, any advice of caution is prudent. I both get that and agree with it.

However, right now I consider the US to be a more serious threat. They are intentionally causing harm to my country in order to bully us into capitulation to steal our land and resources. So while the threats of sabotage or surveillance are true from both counties, my priority is to boycott the US more stringently.

I am absolutely open to better options and if you have any suggestions I’m up for it. And regardless I would do substantial research before buying any new gear.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 2 points 6 days ago

It’s absolutely possible they still exist but I have been unable to find them if so.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 10 points 6 days ago (2 children)

Inertia can hard to overcome!

For myself the invasion threat challenged me to devote more of my free time to look into alternatives to things that I was just coasting on.

Like using Lemmy, for example. You’ve been using this for years but I started just this month. I looked into it during one round of the failed boycotts of Reddit but there was no discussion ongoing in the topics I was interested in, and it sailed out my memory and off my priority list. Was it always the right call? Yes. But now the reasons are strong enough for me to overcome the inertia.

Isn’t the important thing is that it’s happening now , and not that folks like me took longer?

So yeah; I want to ditch Apple products. Right now there are no non-American products that can replace my phone but also provide all the functionality I use such as NFC payments. But I’m gonna do it anyhow when it comes time to replace my phone because it’s important to me. And if enough people do this that will trigger development of solutions for these problems, but even if they don’t I still am doing it anyhow.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 6 days ago (4 children)

I’ve been an avid Unifi fan for years, but for my “prosumer” uses I’ll probably be moving to TP-Link unless I find a better alternative for network gear.

I don’t love supporting China for a variety of serious reasons, but for me… not threatening to conquer my country gives them a big step up from America despite those reasons.

[–] ninthant@lemmy.ca 1 points 6 days ago (6 children)

I have been looking into mediatek, and your tip about via was a good one. It seems to be the best answer to my question in terms of what exists now.

However I’m unable to find anything available for retail consumers, they seem to mainly target industrial markets for embedded applications.

But it’s very close. Part of me wonders if there is a niche market for this in Canada if one could develop this into a product for sale.

 

I’m looking to avoid American-made goods and American companies as much as possible and this relatively challenging when it comes to computers.

From my research so far it seems very difficult to find computer hardware that isn’t using American company microprocessors. CPUs available to non-industrial uses tend to be AMD, Intel, or recently some Qualcomm — all US companies. Even Raspberry Pi uses a Broadcom chip, and the other up-and-coming ARM chips I’ve researched seem to be American as well.

I’d appreciate any insights in this area, either companies with existing products or up and coming companies to watch. If I had a blind spot in my research and I’m missing something obvious please tell me.

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