GM pulled out of Russia and India, so with hindsight, those of us Down Under, with a far smaller total population, shouldn’t have thought we were particularly special. Even where GM remains, such as South Korea, there’s a broken model range, with a big gap where the Cruze used to be. It’s becoming […]
Tag: 2020
Returning to Firefox?
I wonder if it’s time to return to Firefox after an absence of two years and five months. After getting the new monitor, the higher res makes Firefox’s and Opera GX’s text rendering fairly similar (though Chrome, Vivaldi and Edge remain oddly poor, and Vivaldi’s tech people haven’t been able to replicate my bug). There’s […]
Andrew Yang’s campaign: #YangGang was just the beginning
Gage Skidmore/Creative Commons On Andrew Yang’s run for the Democratic nomination in the US: If Mastodon ever stops supporting that Javascript, I wrote: ‘Pretty stoked at what Andrew Yang has managed to achieve. Certain forces tried to minimize his coverage, to give him as little legitimacy as possible (sounds familiar). Yet he also normalized the […]
Read More… from Andrew Yang’s campaign: #YangGang was just the beginning
Five stars for Dell’s P2418D monitor
Working at night: the making of this blog post I had to put in a good word for Dell’s P2418D monitor (earlier post here) after the multiple negative reviews left by one person. If I had to write something negative, it would be about their website blocking me from submitting my positive review by […]
Thumbs-up for Thomas and Professional Painting & Decorating Ltd. in Wellington
On Linkedin, they say you shouldn’t connect with people you haven’t worked with, although in the early days of the site, there were some of us keen to connect with the “power connectors”, those who had amassed lots of connections. Who knows if they really had worked with that many people? But before we knew […]
Read More… from Thumbs-up for Thomas and Professional Painting & Decorating Ltd. in Wellington
Netflix spams, Amazon doesn’t care
It pays to have some ground rules when dealing with the internet. A very big one that I’m sure that you all observe is: don’t do business with spammers. If a Nigerian prince tells you he has $5 million for you, ignore him. There are tainted email lists that have been going around for […]
Human-centred peripherals should be the norm
I’ve had a go at software makers before over giving us solutions that are second-best, because second-best has become the convention. While I can think of an explanation for that, viz. Microsoft packaged Windows computers in the 1990s with Word and Outlook Express, it’s harder to explain why peripherals haven’t been human-centred. I thought […]
Read More… from Human-centred peripherals should be the norm
Don’t give the keys to the company Twitter to just anyone
A few thoughts about Twitter from the last 24 hours, other than ‘Please leave grown-up discussions to grown-ups’: (a) it’s probably not a smart idea to get aggro (about a joke you don’t understand because you aren’t familiar with the culture) from your company’s account, especially when you don’t have a leg to stand on; […]
Read More… from Don’t give the keys to the company Twitter to just anyone
Sticking with 24 inches, but going to QHD: a pleasant upgrade
The Dell P2418D: just like the one I’m looking at as I type, but there are way more wires coming out of the thing in real life Other than at the beginning of my personal computing experience (the early 1980s, and that’s not counting video game consoles), I’ve tended to have a screen that’s […]
Read More… from Sticking with 24 inches, but going to QHD: a pleasant upgrade
Social media sheeple don’t know they’re sheeple
Andrew R. Tester/Creative Commons It’s pretty hard to deactivate one’s Facebook. When I ceased posting in 2017 and reduced my activity to client stuff and group management, I made sure that I had no more Facebook sign-ons left. But it turns out that Lucire’s Twitter-to-Facebook page script relies on my account. I did look […]
Read More… from Social media sheeple don’t know they’re sheeple