Ex-Redditor. I have big autism, big sad-all-the-time, and weird math energy.

Interests

  • extreme metal
  • audio engineering
  • electrical engineering
  • math
  • programming
  • anarchism

Dislikes

  • proprietary software
  • advertisements
  • paywalls
  • capitalism
  • bigotry
  • people who defend the above
  • 0 Posts
  • 8 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • These two are now the first apps I install on any new device:

    • Kiss launcher (simple and fast)
    • Articons icon pack

    Basically, my approach is to (mostly) prioritize text over icons, and reduce the colors I need to process.

    Other apps:

    • Brave browser (for YouTube and built-in anti-tracking features.)
    • Librera (ebook/PDF reader with lots of features)
    • Odyssey (local music player optimized for speed. My library is so large that all the other players were having trouble finding songs.)
    • Graph 89 (TI graphing calculator emulator)
    • Feeder (RSS feed aggregator)

  • Other historical artefacts like pottery, vellum writing, or stone tablets

    I mean I could just smash or burn those things, and lots of important physical artifacts were smashed and burned over the years. I don’t think that easy destructability is unique to data. As far as archaeology is concerned (and I’m no expert on the matter!), the fact that the artefacts are fragile is not an unprecedented challenge. What’s scary IMO is the public perception that data, especially data on the cloud, is somehow immune from eventual destruction. This is the impulse that guides people (myself included) to be sloppy with archiving our data, specifically by placing trust in the corporations that administer cloud services to keep our data as if our of the kindness of their hearts.