Yes, I am aware. Two images ; one shows a similar perspective like yours and other a view towards the outskirts / fort side.
- 161 Posts
- 358 Comments
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
28·3 days agoThere is no way to be sure. Either case, it can be a case of Hanlon’s razor. “Never attribute to malice [in this case: baiting] what can sufficiently be explained by stupidity”.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
42·3 days agoAmongst the apps mentioned as bloated on Windows were Teams, Discord (major offender) and WhatsApp. The latter is a curious case because a Universal Windows app existed (now being deprecated I guess?) that was more memory efficient than the Web wrapper.
And in case, someone in interested there is a terminal client for WhatsApp (and Telegram) called nchat. Sure, it is not at feature parity with web client (images is a big problem, for obvious reasons) but the simple fact that a third party client taking so little resources exists is a damning indictment of Meta. It shows that resource efficient clients are possible (provided the parent company junks the metaverse).
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
35·3 days agoIt is a generic one at a forum. The screenshot is from the comment section of Windows Latest site.
Back in the day on Reddit, some subs had a rule where names had to be blurred or removed. Since then, it is reflex for me to just cut out the author’s name (not that it mattered in this specific case).
If you have Spotify Premium, try a third party client. Even GUI clients like Spotify-qt are memory light [though not at feature parity] whilst terminal clients like ncspot, spotify-player take 1/10th the memory. The latter even supports Spotify connect.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Compulsory spyware app to be installed on every Indian citizen's new phone
441·6 days agoFirst NSA started snooping, but I didn’t care because it did not affect me.
Then Israel started snooping, but I didn’t care because I was not the target.
Then India followed in the footsteps but I didn’t speak and instead tacitly supported it.
And then they came for me and there was no one left to speak for me.
The first response is in a satirical vein to the second (immediate below) one. The hiring for complex ML model is a dead giveaway.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•India orders smartphone makers to preload state-owned cyber safety appEnglish
9·10 days agostate-owned cyber security app that cannot be deleted
I think it’s called malware.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•SIM binding in India: What it means for WhatsApp, Telegram users and why the government wants itEnglish
21·12 days agoSheer uselessness. It will do as much to reduce fraud as the UK law has done to reduce porn content for non adults. What it will mean is that people with multiple SIM, will need to have an always active plan on that number, something telecoms will really like.
Also, it essentially means the death knell for WhatsApp Web (in India) because as stated in article, who wants to log in every SIX hours.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Campbell’s Soup VP mocks ‘poor people’ who buy its food in secret recordingEnglish
4·15 days agoThe built in Web browser by default is Chrome but can be configured to be anything else as well ( including Firefox if the user chooses to)
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Campbell’s Soup VP mocks ‘poor people’ who buy its food in secret recordingEnglish
1·15 days agoI only got a cookie pop up (though even that can be suppressed with other extension) . I had opened it on Desktop with uBlock Origin. By any chance, did you open on mobile?
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
LinkedinLunatics@sh.itjust.works•Economic growth is when you miss funerals
1·24 days agodeleted by creator
It was designed to control the sunlight coming and was meant to remain cool even in harsh sunlight and vice-versa during winters.
I think he refers to the browser extension of the same name.
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Truth is way more fucked up than fiction
45·28 days agoHe is also one of the Co founders of Palantir, quite a notorious company.
This was a 2021 comic, which I think was the time when companies had to comply with GDPR regulations. Cookies didn’t go away, but companies had to explicitly ask the user for consent to use them [or atleast can’t hide that they were using cookies]; usually in form of popups.
When I used to be on Windows, I shifted to Process Explorer. It is developed by Microsoft only I guess as part of their Sysinternals suite. I think it retains an older style UI but is significantly more powerful (has/d virus total integration for one).
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Android@lemdro.id•Lock Screen Ads Are Coming to Some SmartphonesEnglish
31·1 month agoThis isn’t new. Just search for Glance. US/EU users may not have heard of this but entry level smartphones in India have long come bundled with this piece of spam, irrespective of OEM. From Chinese manufacturers to even Samsung/Motorola was guilty of bundling this.
Last I heard of Glance, they had embraced AI (because why not?). Either case, it was nothing more than an ad infested bloatware and whilst possible to toggle on/off (default state was on), removing it was usually tougher (if at all possible via adb, I am not sure of this part).
Glance walked so Nothing could run :p
kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deto
Technology@lemmy.world•ChatGPT's new browser has potential, if you're willing to payEnglish
8·2 months agoThe web is designed for humans to use, so if Atlas can monitor us - how we book train tickets for example - it can learn how to better navigate these kinds of processes.
That is called malware. Or at the very least, Open AI should be paying the users for basically getting their browsing data for free, not other way around.
Second, I object to it being called a Google killer in the article. It is based on Chromium whose future is basically in Google’s hands right now for all Intents and purposes. The days of multiple Web browsers are gone. We have the same thing in new clothing. Opera ditched it’s rendering engine for Chromium, MS ditched Trident for Chromium.
Currently, there are basically only three real browser engines : Chromium, Gecko which powers Firefox Derivatives and Safari(Blinkit? I am not sure of its exact name). Even if Open AI’s new browser (or Perplexity 's for that matter) takes market by storm, they will remain dependent on Google because the underlying code is. They can’t be truly independent unless they have their separate engine. And if the new Ladybird project shows one thing, it is that shipping a new browser might be easy, but a new rendering engine is very tough.
















Dawn (newspaper in question) seems to have come downhill. They used to have a respected name amongst Pakistan’s newspapers. I wonder how many other newspapers (across the world, in general) are slowly getting on this AI trend.