The walled gardens of the big tech-platforms will be their demise.
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The walled gardens of the big tech-platforms will be their demise. So much innovation is lost because of the need for control.
Really, the U.S. platforms are not forward looking. The have hit reverse a long time ago, going full speed towards history.
In the previous century I could pick up a phone and call anyone. Try that with the big platforms. NoT wiTHout a DeAl!
Open protocols are the way ahead.
@spdrnl protocols are irrelevant. People aren't.
These correlates, as companies starting to lose talents they usually make stupid protective moves fighting the symptoms.Activity pub or not, this place is civil due to the work of moderators. It's not that AT proto (open protocol) has decided to platform Nazis. People have done this.
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The walled gardens of the big tech-platforms will be their demise. So much innovation is lost because of the need for control.
Really, the U.S. platforms are not forward looking. The have hit reverse a long time ago, going full speed towards history.
In the previous century I could pick up a phone and call anyone. Try that with the big platforms. NoT wiTHout a DeAl!
Open protocols are the way ahead.
@spdrnl @pluralistic The US platforms are headed by folks who refuse to see intelligence in over 50% of the population and, really, much closer to 99%
This is the philosophy guiding all of their dumb choices because they themselves are not nearly as smart as they think they are and their vision for the tools they sell is utterly myopic.
They don't empower users because they want users to feel too stupid unless they pay for broken tech that coddles them emotionally.
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@spdrnl @pluralistic The US platforms are headed by folks who refuse to see intelligence in over 50% of the population and, really, much closer to 99%
This is the philosophy guiding all of their dumb choices because they themselves are not nearly as smart as they think they are and their vision for the tools they sell is utterly myopic.
They don't empower users because they want users to feel too stupid unless they pay for broken tech that coddles them emotionally.
@clarablackink @pluralistic Yes, greed and control rather than deeper technical savviness.
It is all well marketed, no?
So well, that we risk losing sight of the true potential.
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@lispi314 @pluralistic For me, the exact ramifications are hard to assess.
I have been in tech for a long time, and still do not fully grasp this.
Probably the deviousness is adding to the incomprehensibility. As in: if it would really make any sense, people would sooner recognize is.
It would be good to make this more explicit. What are these agreements exactly preventing?
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@spdrnl @pluralistic Online Video: All tied up in Macromedia flash. Apple doesn't include it on iPhone. Microsoft IIS adds support for HTML5 <video> and YouTube starts adopting it.
Currently I think we have a fair amount of support for things like OpenCL and other standards because people want to support both Mac and other platforms. Otherwise we'd be even more tied to NVIDIA CUDA.. Apple's platform is too big to ignore. No other player can push this.Happy to hear your thoughts.. 2/2
@mattw @pluralistic It's still big parties dictating the progress, in line with their own interests, no?
And, as @lispi314 mentioned, there is still all these patents and digital laws flying around.
One swallow doesn't make a summer?
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Yes, so this points towards lessened autonomy.
It also points towards a restriction on what one can learn or do, or use for learning or doing.
The crazy dude or gal showing how to improve a phone or gadget will not be there.
So less positive empowering exemplars.
Stretching it: it makes citizens into un-empowered consumers.
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@mattw @pluralistic It's still big parties dictating the progress, in line with their own interests, no?
And, as @lispi314 mentioned, there is still all these patents and digital laws flying around.
One swallow doesn't make a summer?
@spdrnl @pluralistic @lispi314 It's not one, it's 4 at least. And as I pointed out, the only reason why we don't have a single standard, NVIDIA CUDA in this instance, is because Apple's closed instance locks them out. If it was open, we'd just be beholden to NVIDIA.
You could say that we need to make CUDA open, technically it apparently is, the problem is that NVIDIA drive it, so their stuff works best.
Open means you can't lock people out, or, you get fragmented standards. Re: Linux desktops.
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Yes, so this points towards lessened autonomy.
It also points towards a restriction on what one can learn or do, or use for learning or doing.
The crazy dude or gal showing how to improve a phone or gadget will not be there.
So less positive empowering exemplars.
Stretching it: it makes citizens into un-empowered consumers.
@lispi314 @pluralistic There is a related debate about trademarks and re-mix culture.
If the world of young people is filled with brands, and it is forbidden to resample these brands in visual or any other form of expression, than a particular type of creative prison is being created.
Being able to repurpose what is there, is the essence of creativity. And it is creativity that drives innovation.
Sure one can splurge on a RaspBerry Pi and all. And that is not given to everyone.
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@spdrnl @pluralistic @lispi314 It's not one, it's 4 at least. And as I pointed out, the only reason why we don't have a single standard, NVIDIA CUDA in this instance, is because Apple's closed instance locks them out. If it was open, we'd just be beholden to NVIDIA.
You could say that we need to make CUDA open, technically it apparently is, the problem is that NVIDIA drive it, so their stuff works best.
Open means you can't lock people out, or, you get fragmented standards. Re: Linux desktops.
@mattw @pluralistic @lispi314 Yes, 4. And there are 8 billion citizens in the world.
I think the parallel thread with LisPi supplements this thread.
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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic Umm wow. So much wrong in that, I don't know where to start.
Least free software? Don't mention that to the Brew or MacPorts folks. Also don't mention that a good chunk of OSS is developed on MacOS these days, you’ll find Makefiles with MacOS build instructions, because it doesn't suck as much as Linux on the desktop does.
I also love that OpenSource folks seem to think that no one ever should get paid for writing software, even if it's OSS software. Try again?
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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic It would work, it's the same OS, just a different skin.
I haven't done it, because I don't need a hole in the head. I have the choice of a dozen SSH clients, including some free.
I'm sorry, it's not reasonable to ask “average users" to install Brew, but they should use Linux and OpenSoftware like GIMP?
Seriously, no consistency in your arguments.
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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic Well again, this is you projecting with apparently no knowledge.
Price of entry into the Apple Ecosystem, is yes, an Apple device, which, a Mac Mini, which will do the job fine, is $599 USD. Entry into the developer program, which is essentially identity verification, all tools available without paying the fee, is $99 USD per year, and has been since it started.
So for less than the price of a mid level GPU, you can get into MacOS development.
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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic Oh, and I like BSD ports. I've spent a bunch of time on the BSDs, Net Open and Free. Nothing quite like building LDAP with DB support and your DB with LDAP support

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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic It's perfectly fine for you to choose not to support the platform, just don't go making up stuff like it's prohibitively expensive or other rubbish. If you wanted to support it, you could. That’s a current model Mac Mini, you could find second hand ones on eBay for cheaper, and they'll still do the job.
Someone new to development could buy a new Mac, and develop for both Linux and Mac comfortably.
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Oh my!
Summarizing, the point is not that U.S. tech platforms do not innovate at all.
Making that the point is for me a straw man in disguise.
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It also makes it useless to write manuals or educational materials to do that.
No cool demonstrations in class: here is how to hack your airtag.
What is in the hands of pupils, triggers their interest.
That is where it starts I think.
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The walled gardens of the big tech-platforms will be their demise. So much innovation is lost because of the need for control.
Really, the U.S. platforms are not forward looking. The have hit reverse a long time ago, going full speed towards history.
In the previous century I could pick up a phone and call anyone. Try that with the big platforms. NoT wiTHout a DeAl!
Open protocols are the way ahead.
@pluralistic @spdrnl minor quibble, phones were easy because monopoly was rampant. The need to break up companies is a repeat of history.
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@lispi314 @spdrnl @pluralistic Ahh, and because it's prohibitively expensive for you, it has no right to exist. Got it.. We should only work on things that you personally can afford.
You're still not making any sense, at all.
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It also makes it useless to write manuals or educational materials to do that.
No cool demonstrations in class: here is how to hack your airtag.
What is in the hands of pupils, triggers their interest.
That is where it starts I think.
@lispi314 @pluralistic Rolling on, this is probably directly related to Europe's lagging.
There is enough technical talent to make innovation happen. Software engineers are willing and able.
Still there is this invisible wall. Yes, money, yes, a culture of land, steel and oil.
And also: you never know when you trip a patent wire. And few European investors can survive that. #EU
There is this uncomfortable vacuum.
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Oh my!
Summarizing, the point is not that U.S. tech platforms do not innovate at all.
Making that the point is for me a straw man in disguise.