mwalimu

joined 4 years ago
[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 7 points 10 months ago (7 children)

Avafind.

Searching for almost anything was so much easy. Such a powerful tool that disappeared. Its performance 20 years ago was better than Finder is today. At least from my experience.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 4 points 10 months ago

Used to be the first thing we installed on phones and PCs. Opera was blazing fast on basic phones as far back as 2008sh.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 1 points 10 months ago

Sadly, yes. One would hope the more core sectors use it, the more the general population would use such tools. But alas!

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 15 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (3 children)

Cold plain metrics can easily hide social complexity.

Assume 10 investigative journalists use modded privacy-friendly Firefox for year long investigation. Then their report is read by 10 million average news reader on stock browsers like Chrome. Network logics tell us that Firefox browser has asymmetrical value in the ecosystem than plain usage metrics can ever reveal.

The obsession with numbers (the more the better) is a major blinding effect in societies driven by hierarchical cultures.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 1 points 10 months ago

Why are you letting facts come in between the truth?

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 3 points 10 months ago

That sucks! As long as a device can decode the signals, I don’t see why they should phase it out just to be compatible with DAB+ (especially when infrastructural costs are not a major factor).

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 22 points 10 months ago (2 children)

FM receiver on phones + 3.5mn jack was a crucial source of local radio transmissions. I suspect some phones still ship radio receivers but the popular types like Samsungs and iPhones don’t seem to care (or perhaps that competes with their music and podcast markets).

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 7 points 11 months ago

My kind of hopes.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 1 points 11 months ago

At the most basic, Facebook (they changed to Meta as a PR thingy, mostly) thrives on being a closed broker extracting from the open world. It is not that I predict they will break things here, it is that they have consistently demonstrated that is their only way of making profits. It all starts nice and smooth. Until it isn’t.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 8 points 11 months ago (1 children)

What is the obsession with numbers? Centralization mentality is the problem. The idea that unless 5 Billion people are on a network will it be “successful” denies the joys of effective and sustainable networks. I really honestly wouldn’t want to see a fediverse server with more than 100K daily active users. I would rather have 10 instances of 10K active users.

Meta and those billionaire centrists can go fuck themselves.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 4 points 11 months ago

The article itself focuses on a Palestinian who has gon ethrough the whole wringer for decades. It is not a distraction, at least that is not the intention. It is a deeper look into history to locate what today feels like new stuff for the world yet this is how "Gaza breathes", away from Hamas and ISIS and Israel.

[–] mwalimu@baraza.africa 6 points 11 months ago

Me, deep in the night, reading about modem signals and off the hook. I love forum threads. They have taught me more than I can imagine.

 

How Allende's engineers and a British management consultant dared challenge corporations and spy agencies - and almost won.

Podcast website

 

cross-posted from: https://baraza.africa/post/317062

As well as equipping and training security agencies in surveillance, the Fund is being used to bankroll the development of mass-scale biometric identity systems across the African continent and is awarding lucrative contracts to well-connected European security companies in the process.

 

The report’s core fault is conceptual and methodological. Its definition of “alternative social media” is “social media sites with relatively small user bases that have typically emerged as alternatives to larger, more established social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.”

 

In the case of Watergate, it was hard to unveil Nixon’s complicity, but the moment the President’s involvement was established, he was gone. In the case of Greece’s Watergate, our parliamentary sovereignty was jettisoned so that the guilty PM could stay put. In this sense, Greece’s Watergate bodes more ill for democracy than America’s original.

 

Biometrics + AI + Fear converging into a perfect storm for the very idea of "public" events. It sucks!

 

A history of privacy - with bed and sleeping as a proxy.

 

In the words of one Facebook moderator who spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity to protect their job, in practice the policy “leaves very little wiggle room for criticism of Zionism” at a time when precisely that ideology is subject to intense scrutiny and protest.

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