whofearsthenight

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

My god. I mean, it's probably a fair price to pay for no mass shootings and universal health care, but still wild.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

I live in a small town in Oregon. A few years ago, it was $7. Now it's $10.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I mean, it's a bummer when the bougie burger places do this, but when the taco trucks and teriyaki shops near me started costing more than $2 a taco or $10 for a plate of yakisoba, I knew shit was getting hard out there.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Generally, yes, but if you're in a mixed environment than Firefox makes some sense because at least for me, I want cross-browser syncing on all of the devices I use most. I have a PC for gaming and the occasional need to use a PC at work, so I keep Firefox on iOS for this type of thing, but that mostly just acts as a place to push things to from Safari.

Even if they do use the same browser engine, the feature sets may be worth it. Orion, for example, I really wanted to like and work well since you can use a lot of the desktop add ons in both the Firefox and Chrome add-on store, but it was just too buggy to daily drive.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Lots of people are covering the actual answer, but this is one of the reasons I default to duck duck go on everything - the bang operator. For example:

cat videos !yt or !yt cat videos (or probably even cat !yt videos) will search YouTube for cat videos.

I have a bunch of these that I use all of the time:

  • !a, Amazon
  • !g and !gi, google and google images
  • !imdb, uh, imdb
  • !nf, Netflix
  • retired now but !r searches reddit
  • !so, stack overflow
  • !w, wikipedia.

I guess they're up to nearly 14k of these now so chances are the thing you want to search is in the list. Aside from that, Google's search results are increasingly garbage these days and filled with ads, so while I used to get a lot of use out of !g and !gi, I really don't any longer.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

This is what I do as well. Fortunately, Apple doesn't really need to make money from the browser, so imo it's still the "cleanest" experience. Meaning, It's just a browser. It doesn't want to sell you a VPN or crypto or get you to upgrade to a paid tier reading service, and integration in the ecosystem is obviously better.

I still really like Firefox, and that's what I use as a backup on Macs, and primary on my PCs. There have been increasing number of rumors though that Apple is going to open up the App Store requirements in some way though that might allow Firefox to use it's own engine on iOS, and if they do that I'll probably switch over for a while and kick the tires.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago

There was a tiny window of time back before like 2010 where Google was legitimately a good choice. At the time Chrome came out, Firefox was having some notorious performance/bloat issues, and conversely Chrome was light and fast. Lots of stuff that came out around 2000-2010 from Google was legit best in class, and they were still generally in their "don't be evil era." That's obviously gone way out the window and has for some time. I started switching away from Google stuff around the time they killed Reader, and I'm glad I did because they've only gotten increasingly awful.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Hey don't forget about the other half of the posts, which are in a language you don't understand. Seriously, my block list is long because language settings here mean nothing, and while I'm sure that's quality content, uh, I can't understand it.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

From me? Of course not. Unfortunately, I do live in society and do have to share my contact info with others, and I'm guessing the vast majority of people just spam the "okay" button as Facebook asks for contact access, mic access, camera access, access to your colon, etc.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago

It's only the smaller ones that I really miss in the fedi. Like, my pipeline for memes is doing fine, I doubt i'm missing any cultural touchstone moments, but on the corpo-net if you needed info specific info about your window box AC unit, not only was there probably a sub, but there was a larger sub just for general AC that would probably ban your post and say something like "hey post this in windowAC."

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Meta already demonstrably does this. I deleted my real Facebook in like 2016. Around 2019-2020, I created a new burner account to browse Marketplace with nearly all fake info expect my name, phone, and email. And lo and behold all of my friend suggestions are people I know and mostly were on the old account. The most charitable I can imagine is that those suggestion had me in their contacts which they agree to share with Facebook (which is problematic af imo) but it is extremely likely they just retain all of data especially since many of the people I was suggested have never had my current number/email.

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