A 50-something French dude

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Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: November 26th, 2023

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  • A pair of binoculars and some kid-focused book to start/learn bird and/or nature watching? Taking him to someplace where he can practice watching birds. Add to that a nice sketchbook and a small portable paint box or colored pencils in order to draw said birds.

    That would make for an original and very stimulating/creative gift, and potentially this could be a fun and exciting motivation for more outdoor activities :)



  • Not the OP, but I tried encrypting my files before uploading them to OneDrive. Microsoft did not liked that and was constantly bugging me regarding potential threats.

    For the moment, lacking any better solution/knowledge, I put DIY encrypted cloud backups on hold (and went back to using iCloud which as far as I understand is encrypted, and as I’d rather not have MS nor Google constantly sniffing my personal files at all) but I will have a look at Hetzner offering. If it’s doable for a non-geek like myself to configure a Storage Box for automated backups, I may decide to use that instead. Being EU-based makes it a + as far as I’m concerned.




  • Next to an iPad I use as one would expect, I also use a Kindle I disconnected from the Web (and Amazon) many years ago. It doesn’t get updates (no need in order to read ebooks) and I have to manually load ebooks, which is fine by me. The battery is still great. And I know nobody is sniffing my reading habits.

    I’ve been reading ebooks since I owned a Palm Pilot (yep, that was quite some time ago) and have always privileged digital over print since then: it’s just more convenient.

    But a very surprising thing started happening to me recently: tired of having to fight big tech to get some privacy and to avoid updates with always more useless ‘features’ pilled over my reading experience (I don’t like at all how Apple Books is changing), I started purchasing print editions. Instead of the ebooks, I mean. More and more. To the point that last month and the first two weeks of December I purchased zero ebook, only print.

    It’s a a nice experience to be certain that no one is profiling my reading habits (I can still purchase books paying in cash if I want to), or enter my house to remove it from my bookshelves. I like it so much that I’ve also started using my notebook and fountain pen much more for note-taking instead of the iPad. Curious to see where it will lead me, if anywhere ;)



  • Merci!

    Pour tout te dire, le freeze c’est une des choses qui m’a le plus séduit dans Debian. Ça et les perfs, sur mon portable.

    Après avoir testé Arch que j’aimais vraiment beaucoup (sauf que j’ai vite réalisé que ça faisait trop de màj à mon goût et que ça m’apportait rien de toujours avoir les apps les plus récentes), et après avoir testé Ubuntu (auquel j’ai pas trop accroché), je me suis dit, bah je vais essayer cette Debian qui sert de base à tellement de distro, pour voir, même si je savais pour les paquets vieillots. Je l’ai installée et… je suis tombé sous le charme.

    Une distrib hyper-rapide, une stablité qui n’a jamais cessé de me donner le sourire depuis presque 4 ans (je sais pas trop, j’ai pas compté, je suis arrivé tout à la fin de Debian 10) et qui me donne presque tout ce dont j’ai besoin (sauf une syncro avec l’iPhone, mais ça… Debian y peut pas grand-chose), et zéro maintenance (aucune màj à part les trucs de sécurité nécessaire). Du coup, j’y suis resté, depuis la 10 donc.

    Debian m’a clairement confirmé que j’avais aucun besoin de courir après les dernières nouveautés non plus. Et pour les rares apps où j’ai besoin/j’apprécie des nouveautés, j’utilise des appimage ou des trucs de ce genre.





  • Libb@jlai.lutoTechnologie - 🤖@jlai.lu*Permanently Deleted*
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    7 months ago

    J’avais jeté un oeil sur Ansel il y a quelques mois de ça, c’était déjà mieux que ce foutoir incohérent qu’est devenu Darktable (l’art subtil de se faire des amis; je suis également doué pour causer politique sans fâcher personne lors des repas de famille, notez). mais il y a encore énormément de travail.

    Je lui souhaite tout le succès du monde : un Darktable revu (et et bien tenu) pourrait être un régal.




  • Lol what will you say them? Your IP won’t be shared to other websites, but only to Google, switch your browser now! That will be so dumb…

    I won’t tell them much. I will suggest they read it and let them know I will gladly answer any question they may have after reading it.

    They’re just ignorant of the technical considerations but they still have a fully working brain, and given some lead they should easily understand the topic at hand (a bit like, say, if I discussed the differences in the process of painting watercolor versus oil or gouache while you have yourself never painted a canvas in your live I would not consider you too dumb to understand, or laugh at you, I would instead take some time to explain you what are those essential differences and why they matter. Well, this article will do exactly that in regard to Google, for those persons).

    As I wrote in my first comment, this article is a nice and clear summary of the issue (Google privacy-washing) and should help them understand or, if you prefer, realize that this issue may be worth getting more into it. Then, could begin our discussion.

    Don’t you agree that understanding there is an issue is a required starting point for anyone to take any decision in order to try to correct said issue?

    As for the rest of your well thought-out comment, here is my take: I hope they will change, and not just their browser, but I certainly will not tell them to change or to do anything they don’t want.
    I know we live in this strange new world, where hostility and mockery is becoming the norm, but barking orders or Loling at the face of people is not what a discussion is supposed to be. Maybe that is something that’s worth repeating, no matter how dumb it sounds.